TX 

715 



\90 



t 3, 



11 


Royal Baker 

^_A _ 




and ^ 


K^C" y : .^^ ^^31 



II 





Class _ T%U5 _ 
Book_ j?ii_ 
Copyright N° ^c&. a, 

COPYRIGHT DEPOSIT. 



THE 

/ 



ROYAL BAKER 



AND 



PASTRY COOK 

A MANUAL OF PRACTICAL COOKERY 

BY THE CHEFS 

OF THE 

NEW YORK COOKING SCHOOL 






"W 
$» 



NEW YORK 

ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO. 

1902 



THF LIBRARY OF 
CONGRESS, 

R ICSIVSD 
OnPVBIOMT FNTRV 

AsXXo No 
cor- 



/ 



<* 



V 



%./t> 



^W 



Copyright, 1902, 
By Royal Baking Powder Company. 



ALPHABETICAL INDEX TO RECEIPTS 



PAGE 

Apple Snow 29 

Asparagus on Toast 39 

Bannocks 7 

Barley Water 42 

Batter, Fritter, Plain 8 

Beans, Kidney, Brown 

Sauce 39 

Beans, String 39 

Beef, Braised 34 

Beef, Corned, and Turnips. 35 

Beef Stew, Brown 35 

Beef Tea 42 

Beefsteak, Broiled 34 

Beefsteak, or Chops, Panned 34 

Beefsteak Pie, French 34 

Beets, Cream Sauce 39 

Biscuit, Breakfast 5 

Biscuit, Eccles 20 

Biscuit, Egg 5 

Biscuit, Emergency 5 

Biscuit, Nut 5 

Biscuit, Royal Hot 5 

Biscuit, Sandwich 5 

Blanc Mange, Chocolate . . .29 

Boys, Jolly 9 

Bread, Brown 2 

Bread, Brown, No. 2 2 

Bread, Brown, Boston 2 

Bread, Brown, Boston, No. 2 2 
Bread, Brown, Boston, No. 3 2 
Bread, Brown, Pennsylvania 3 

Bread, Corn-loaf 3 

Bread, Corn, New Orleans . 3 
Bread, Corn, Nonpareil .... 3 
Bread, Corn, St. Charles ... 3 

Bread, Corn, Spider 3 

Bread, Entire Wheat 3 

Bread, Graham, Delicate. . . 3 

Bread, Graham Lunch 3 

Bread, Graham Unfermented 2 

Bread, Hominy 3 

Bread, Household 2 

Bread, Mush 3 

Bread, Norwegian, for Dys- 
peptics 2 

Bread, Oatmeal 2 

Bread, Rice 3 

Bread, Rice and Indian 3 

Bread, Royal Baking Pow- 
der 2 

Bread, Rye 3 

Broth, Scotch 31 

Buchtels 20 

Buns, Bath 20 

Buns, Cinnamon 20 

Buns, Hot Cross 7 

Buttercups 18 

Cabbage, Boiled 40 

Cake 11 

Cake, Adelaide 11 

Cake, Almond 11 

Cake, Almond, No. 2 11 

Cake, Angel Food 12 

Cake, Apple Jelly 12 

Cake, Banana 12 

Cake, Bride's 12 

Cake, Centennial 12 

Cake, Chocolate 12 

Cake, Chocolate Cream 12 

Cake, Chocolate Layer 12 

Cake, Chocolate Loaf 12 

Cake, Cinnamon Chocolate. 12 

Cake, Citron 12 

Cake, Cocoanut Layer 12 

Cake, Cocoanut Loaf 12 

Cake, Coffee 12,20 

Cake, Coffee, No. 2 13 



PAGE 

Cake, Coffee, German 7 

Cake, Continental Fruit . . .13 

Cake, Cream 13 

Cake, Cup 13 

Cake, Currant 13 

Cake, Currant, No. 2 13 

Cake, Currant, English 13 

Cake, Duchesse 13 

Cake, Dutch Peach 20 

Cake, Fig 14 

Cake, French 14 

Cake, Fruit, Dark 13 

Cake, Fruit, Delicate 13 

Cake, Fruit, Light 14 

Cake, Fruit, Wedding 17 

Cake, Geranium 14 

Cake, German Apple 20 

Cake, Ginger 14 

Cake, Ginger Sponge 14 

Cake, Gingerbread 14 

Cake, Gold 14 

Cake, Gold, No. 2 14 

Cake, Harrison 14 

Cake, Hazelnut 14 

Cake, Honey 14 

Cake, Ice Cream 14 

Cake, Imperial 14 

Cake, Jelly 15 

Cake, Jumbles 18 

Cake, Lady 15 

Cake, Lemon 15 

Cake, Lightning 15 

Cake, Lunch, Boston 15 

Cake, Marbled 15 

Cake, Marshmallow 15 

Cake, Minnehaha 15 

Cake, Molasses 16 

Cake, Nut 15 

Cake, Orange 15 

Cake, Peach Blossom 15 

Cake, Pond Lily 16 

Cake, Pound 16 

Cake, Queen 16 

Cake, Rolled Jelly 15 

Cake, Royal Cookies 17 

Cake, Scotch 16 

Cake, Shrewsbury 17 

Cake, Silver 16 

Cake, Snow 16 

Cake, Spice 16 

Cake, Spice, Delicate 16 

Cake, Sponge 16 

Cake, Sponge, Almond 16 

Cake, Sponge, Berwick 16 

Cake, Sponge, Cream 16 

Cake, Vanilla 17 

Cake, Wash. (St. L., 1780) .16 

Cake, Webster 17 

Cake, Wedding (or Bride). .17 

Cake, White Mountain 17 

Cake, Wild Rose 17 

Cake, Wine 17 

Cake, Yorkshire Breakfast. 7 

Cakes, Albert 18 

Cakes, Anise-seed 17 

Cakes, Bread 10 

Cakes, Buckwheat 10 

Cakes, Buckwheat, Royal . . 10 

Cakes, Butter 6 

Cakes, Chocolate, Little. . . .18 

Cakes, Cigarettes 18 

Cakes, Cinnamon 18 

Cakes, Cream 13 

Cakes, Delicious Little 18 

Cakes, Drop (Breakfast) .... 7 

Cakes, Drop (Sweet) 18 

Cakes, Edenkobers 18 



PAGE 

Cakes, Fried 22 

Cakes, Griddle, Corn-meal .10 
Cakes, Griddle, Crushed 

Wheat 10 

Cakes, Griddle, Egg 9 

Cakes, Griddle, Geneva 9 

Cakes, Griddle, Graham ... 9 
Cakes, Griddle, Hominy ... 10 
Cakes, Griddle, Huckleberry 10 

Cakes, Griddle, Indian 10 

Cakes, Griddle, Rice 10 

Cakes, Griddle, Rye 9 

Cakes, Griddle, Three Egg. 10 

Cakes, Hermits 18 

Cakes, Little Chocolate 18 

Cakes, Little Spice 18 

Cakes, Rice 18 

Cakes, Rye Drop 22 

Cakes, Scotch 18 

Cakes, Soft Gingerbread. . .19 

Cakes, Spencer 18 

Cakes, Spice Drop 19 

Cakes, Spice, Little 18 

Cakes, Strudel 20 

Cakes, Tarts, Sand 19 

Cakes, Tea 20 

Cakes, Walnut Wafers 19 

Cakes, Wheat or Flannel . . 10 

Cakes, Wheat, Royal 9 

Cake Fillings 19 

Chocolate 19 

Chocolate, No. 2 19 

Cocoanut 19 

Cocoanut, No. 2 19 

Cream 19 

Cream, No. 2 19 

Cream, No. 3 19 

Cream, Chocolate 19 

Fig 19 

Fruit 19 

Lemon 19 

Orange 19 

Prune and Nut 19 

Candy, Butter Scotch 42 

Candy, Butter Taffy 42 

Candy, Caramels, Choco- 
late 42 

Candy, Cocoanut Cream ... 42 

Candy, Cream 42 

Candy, Creamed Nuts 42 

Candy, Fudge 42 

Candy, Hickory-nut 42 

Candy, Ice Cream 42 

Candy, Molasses 42 

Candy, Peanut Brittle 42 

Candy, Popcorn, Candied . .42 
Candy, Velvet Molasses ...42 

Candy, Walnut Cream 42 

Canning 30 

Carrots and other Root 

Vegetables 40 

Catsup, Tomato 41 

Catsup, Walnut 41 

Cauliflower, Pickling 41 

Celery Stuffing 36 

Charlotte Russe 29 

Cheese Straws 39 

Chestnut Stuffing for Poul- 
try 36 

Chicken, Boned 37 

Chicken, Broiled 36 

Chicken, Brown Fricassee .36 

Chicken, Creamed 37 

Chicken, Fricassee 36 

Chicken, Fried Spring 36 

Chicken Pat6s 37 

Chicken Pie 37 



PAGE 

Chicken Pot-pie 37 

Chicken Pot-pie, No. 2 37 

Chocolate 41 

Chocolate Blanc Mange .... 29 

Chops, Panned 34 

Chow Chow 41 

Chowder, Clam 33 

Chowder, Fish 33 

Clam Chowder 33 

Clam Fritters 8 

Cocoa 41 

Coffee, Boiled 41 

Coffee for Six Persons 41 

Coffee, French 41 

Coffee, Vienna 41 

Cold Slaw 39 

Consomme 31 

Cookies, Cocoanut 17 

Cookies, Plain 17 

Cookies, Royal 17 

Cookies, Soft 17 

Corn, Dried Sweet 40 

Corn Pudding 40 

Corn, Stewed 40 

Corned Beef and Turnips, 

Boiled 35 

Crabs, Deviled 33 

Crabs, Soft Shell 33 

Croutons 32 

Crullers 22 

Crullers, No. 2 22 

Crullers, No. 3 22 

Crullers, No. 4 22 

Crullers, Dutch 22 

Crumpets 7 

Crumpets, Hominy 7 

Crumpets, London 7 

Crumpets, Rice 7 

Currant Loaf 21 

Custard, Baked 29 

Custard, Corn Starch 29 

Custard, Tapioca 29 

Diamonds 5 

Dressing, Boiled 38 

Dressing, Cream. . . 38 

Dressing, French 38 

Doughnuts 22 

Doughnuts, No. 2 22 

Doughnuts, No. 3 22 

Doughnuts, No. 4 22 

Doughnuts, No. 5 22 

Doughnuts, German 22 

Doughnuts, Puff Ball 22 

Dumpling, English .23 

Dumplings, Apple, Royal . . 23 
Dumplings, Apple, No. 2. . .23 
Dumplings, Apple, No. 3. . .23 

Dumplings, Berry 23 

Dumplings, Egg, for Soup .23 

Dumplings, Farina 23 

Dumplings for Soup 23 

Dumplings for Stews 23 

Dumplings for Stews, No. 2 .23 

Dumplings, Peach 23 

Dumplings, Peach, No. 2 ..23 

Dumplings, Potato 24 

Dumplings, Royal Apple ... 23 

Dumplings, Suet 24 

Dumplings, Suet, Danish.. 24 

ficlaires a la Creme 13 

Egg Plant, Fried 40 

Eggs, Baked, Fancv 39 

Eggs, Baked, Plain .39 

Eggs, Boiled, Hard 39 

Eggs, Boiled, Soft 39 

Eggs, Poached 39 

Eggs, Scrambled 39 

Eggs, Snow 29 



PAGE 

Fish, Blue, Fried and other 

Kinds 32 

Fish, Boiled, Bass or other 

Fish 32 

Fish, Broiled 32 

Fish, Brook Trout or other 

Small Fish, To Fry 33 

Fish Cakes 32 

Fish Chowder 33 

Fish, Cod, Balls 32 

Fish, Creamed 32 

Fish, Directions for Prepar- 
ing 32 

Fish, Halibut, Broiled 32 

Fish, Mackerel, Salt, Broiled 32 

Fish, To Broil 32 

Floating Island 30 

Food for the Sick 41 

Freeze, How to 30 

Fritter Batter, Plain 8 

Fritters, Apple 8 

Fritters, Banana 8 

Fritters, Clam 8 

Fritters, Corn 8 

Fritters, Fruit 8 

Fritters, Hominy 8 

Fritters, Meat 8 

Fritters, Oyster 8 

Fritters, Pineapple 8 

Fritters, Rice 8 

Fritters, Strawberry 8 

Frosting, Maple Sugar 20 

Frosting, Marshmallow ... 20 

Fruits, Iced 29 

Fruits, Spiced 31 

Fruit Wheels 21 

Geese anu Duck Stuffing. . 36 

Gems 6 

Gems, Apple 6 

Gems, Graham, Royal 6 

Gems, Rice 6 

German Puffs 7 

Gingerbread, Soft 13,19 

Ginger Snaps 18 

Glac<5, Biscuit 30 

Gravy, Poultry 36 

Gruel, Corn-meal 42 

Ham, Boiled 35 

Ham, Broiled, and Eggs 34 

Ice, Orange Water 30 

Ice, Raspberry Water 30 

Ice Cream, Biscuit Glace\ . .30 

Ice Cream, Chocolate 30 

Ice Cream, Crushed Straw- 
berry 30 

Ice Cream, Delmonico 30 

Ice Cream, Peach 30 

Ice Cream, Philadelphia ...30 

Ice Cream, Plain 30 

Iced Fruits for Dessert 29 

Ices, Water 30 

Icing, Almond 19 

Icing, Bakers' Soft 19 

Icing, Boiled 20 

Icing, Chocolate Transpa- 
rent 19 

Icing, Chocolate Water ... .20 

Icing, Clear 19 

Icing, Plain 20 

Icing, Royal 20 

Icing, Transparent 19 

Icing, Water 20 

Icing, White 19 

Jams 31 

Jellies 31 

Jelly, Restorative 42 

Jolly Boys 9 

Jumbles 18 



PAGE 

Jumules, Peanut 18 

Kidney, Brown Stew 35 

Liver and Bacon 35 

Lobster Newburg 33 

Lobster Salad 38 

Lobster, To Open 33 

Lobsters or Crabs, To Boil. 33 

Macaroni 40 

Mayonnaise 38 

Meats, Boiling and Stew- 
ing 34 

Meats, Broiling 34 

Meats, Frying 34 

Meats, Roasting 34 

Mince-meat 28 

Mince-meat, No. 2 29 

Muffins, Berry 6 

Muffins, Boston 5 

Muffins, Corn, Royal 6 

Muffins, Egg, Royal 6 

Muffins, English 6 

Muffins, French 5 

Muffins, Graham 6 

Muffins, Hominy 6 

Muffins, Mountain 6 

Muffins, Oatmeal 6 

Muffins, Potato 6 

Muffins, Rice 6 

Muffins, Royal 5 

Muffins, Royal Sally Lunn. 6 

Muffins, Rye 6 

Muffins, Sweet 6 

Mutton Haricot 35 

Mutton or Lamb, Boiled . . .35 

Omelet 39 

Omelet, Orange and other 

Sweet 39 

Omelet Souffle" 39 

Omelets, Fancy 39 

Onions, Fried 40 

Oyster Pat6s 33 

Oyster Pie 33 

Oyster Stuffing for Poultry .36 

Oysters, Broiled 33 

Oysters, Creamed 33 

Oysters, Fried 33 

Oysters, Panned 33 

Oysters, Pickled 33 

Oysters, Roasted in the Shell 33 

Oysters, Scalloped 33 

Oysters, Stewed 33 

Pancakes 10 

Pancakes, English 10 

Pancakes, French 10 

Paste for Pies 27 

Paste for Pies, No. 2 27 

Paste for Pies, No. 3 27 

Paste for Pies, No. 4 27 

Paste for Pies, No. 5 (Puff 

Paste) 27 

Paste for Pies, No. 6 27 

Peach Tart 29 

Peculiars 2 

Piccalilly 41 

Pickled Red Cabbage 41 

Pickles 41 

Pickles. Chow Chow 41 

Pickling Cauliflower 41 

Pie, Apple 28 

Pie, Apple, No. 2 28 

Pie, Apple, Dried 28 

Pie, Apple Pot 28 

Pie, Chocolate Custard 28 

Pie, Cocoanut 28 

Pie, Cranberry 28 

Pie, Cream and Orange 2*8 

Pie, Custard (Plain) 28 

Pie, Custard, Apple 28 



PAGE 

Pie, Custard, Peach 28 

Pie, Gooseberry 28 

Pie, Lemon Cream 28 

Pie,LeinonCreauiALeringue.28 

Pie, Mince 28 

Pie, Mince-meat 28 

Pie, Paste for 27 

Pie, Plum 29 

Pie, Pumpkin 29 

Pie. Rhubarb 29 

Pie, Squash 29 

Pies, Fruit 28 

Pork and Beans 33 

Pork Chops, with Tomato 

Gravy 35 

Pork, Roast Leg of 36 

Pork, Salt, Pried 35 

Pork, Stuffing for 36 

Potato Croquettes 40 

Potatoes, Baked 40 

Potatoes, Creamed 40 

Potatoes, Fried 40 

Potatoes, Fried. No. 2 40 

Potatoes, Lyonnaise 40 

Potatoes, Mashed 40 

Poultry Gravy 36 

Poultry Stuffing 36 

Poultry, To Clean 36 

Poultry, To Roast 36 

Poultry, To Truss 36 

Preserves, Amount Sugar 

to Quart 31 

Preserving 31 

Pudding, Apple (Boston) . .24 
Pudding, Apple (English) . .24 
Pudding, Apple, Tapioca ... 24 
Pudding, Batter I Baked). . .24 
Pudding. Batter (Boiled). . .24 

Pudding, Batter (Fruit) 24 

Pudding, Blackberry 24 

Pudding, Blackberry, No. 2.24 

Pudding, Cabinet 24 

Pudding, Cherry 24 

Pudding, Chocolate 24 



Pudding, Cottage 24 

Pudding, Cottage, No. 2. . . .24 

Pudding, Custard 25 

Pudding, Fig 25 

Pudding, Fine Peach 25 

Pudding, Indian 25 

Pudding, Lemon Suet 25 

Pudding, Orange 25 

Pudding, Peach Cottage . . .25 
Pudding, Plum (Boston 

Baked) 24 

Pudding, Plum (Royal 

Christmas) 25 

Pudding, Plum, No. 2 25 

Pudding, Poor Man's 25 

Pudding, Princess 25 

Pulding, Raisin 25 

Pudding, Rice 25 

Pudding, Rice, No. 2 25 

Pudding, Sago 26 

Pudding, Sauces for 26 

Pudding, Souffle^ Fruit 26 

Pudding, Suet 26 

Pudding, Tapioca 26 

Pudding. Tapioca and Cocoa- 
nut 26 

Pudding, Yorkshire 34 

Puffs, German 7 

Puffs, Yankee 7 

Rarebit, Welsh 39 

Rice, Boiled 40 

Rolls, Breakfast 3 

Rolls, Dinner 4 

Rolls, French 4 



PAGE 

Rolls, Fruit 4 

Rolls, Graham 3 

Rolls, Lunch 4 

Rolls, Parker House 4 

Rolls, Twist 4 

Roly Poly, iiaisin 25 

Rusks . . 7 

Salad, Celery 38 

Salad, Chicken 38 

Salad, Cucumber and Onion 38 

Salad, Lobster 38 

Salad, Potato 38 

Salad, Potato and Egg 38 

Salad, Salmon 38 

Salad, Tomato 38 

Sally Lunns, Royal 7 

Salt Pork, Fried 35 

Sauces for Meats and Fish . 37 

Allemande 37 

Bechamel 37 

Bread 37 

Brown 37 

Caper 37 

Cream 37 

Currant Jelly 38 

Curry 37 

Drawn Butter 37 

Egg, for Fish 37 

Hollandaise 38 

Horse-radish 38 

Italian Tomato 38 

Maitre d'Hotel Butter 38 

Mint 38 

Mushroom 37 

Olive 37 

Piquante 37 

Robert 37 

Sharp Brown 37 

Soubise 37 

Spanish 37 

Tartare 38 

Thick White or Cream ! . "37 

Tomato 38 

White..... 37 

Sauces for Puddings 26 

Brandy 26 

Canned Fruit 26 

Cream 26 

Cream, Hygienic 26 

Creamy 26 

Currant Jelly 26 

Currant Jelly, No. 2 26 

Custard 26 

Duchesse 26 

Foaming 26 

Golden 26 

Hard 26 

Lemon 26 

Molasses 26 

Orange 26 

Peach 26 

Rexford 26 

Roval Wine 27 

Sugar 27 

Vanilla 27 

Wine 27 

Wine, No. 2 27 

Sausages 35 

Scallops in Batter 33 

Scones, Scotch 7 

Scotch Broth 31 

ShortCake 21 

ShortCake, No. 2 21 

Short Cake, No. 3 21 

Short Cake, No. 4 21 

Short Cake, Apple 21 

Short Cake, Banana 21 

Short Cake, Blackberry. . . .21 



PAOK 

Short Cake, Canned Fruit .21 

Short Cake, Cherry 21 

Short Cake, Huckleberry ..21 

Short Cake, Individual 21 

Short Cake, Peach 21 

Short Cake, Raspberry 21 

Short Cake, Strawberry 21 

Slappers ~ 

Slaw, Cold 39 

Snow, Apple 29 

Snow Eggs 29 

Soup, Bean 32 

Soup, Clam 32 

Soup, Consomme 1 31 

Soup, Family 32 

Soup, Mock Bisque 31 

Soup, Oxtail 32 

Soup Stock 31 

Soup, Tomato 31 

Soups of Dried Peas or 

Beans 32 

Soups with Pastes or Vege- 
tables 31 

Spiced Fruits 31 

Squash, Stewed 40 

Steak or Chops, Panned ... 34 

Stew, Brown Beef 35 

Stew, Brown Kidney 35 

Stew, Irish 35 

Stew, Oyster 33 

Straws, Cheese 39 

Stuffing for Geese and . 

Ducks 36 

Stuffing, Pork 36 

Stuffing, Poultry 36 

Stuffing, Poultry, Celery. . .36 
Stuffing, Poultry, Chestnut. 36 
Stuffing, Poultry, Oyster . . 36 
Stuffing, Tomatoes, Green 

Peppers, etc 36 

Stuffing, Veal 36 

Sweetbreads 36 

Tart, Peach 29 

Tartlets 29 

Tarts, Banbury 28 

Tarts, Gooseberry, Currant, 
Apple, or any other Fruit 29 

Tarts, Open Jam 29 

Tarts, Sand 19 

Tea 41 

Tea, Beef 42 

Tomato Catsup 41 

Tomato Sauce 38 

Tomatoes, Panned 40 

Tomatoes, Stewed 40 

Tomatoes, Stuffed 40 

Tomatoes, Stuffing for 36 

Triangles 20 

Turnips, Mashed 40 

Veal, Braised Shoulder 34 

Veal Cutlets, Breaded 36 

Veal Stuffing 36 

Vegetables, Hints on Cook- 
ing 39 

Vegetables, Ragout of 40 

Waffles 8 

Waffles, No. 2 8 

Waffles, German 9 

Waffles, Rice 9 

Waffles, Soft 9 

Waffles, Virginia 9 

Walnut Catsup 41 

Walnut Wafers 19 

Wheels, Fruit 21 

Wine Whey 42 

Wonders 23 

Yankee Puffs 7 

Yorkshire Pudding 34 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



Tlie cuts on this page represent utensils used in the various kinds of baking, and are re- 
ferred to in the Receipts according to numbers. 




DO NOT BUY BAKING POWDER LOOSE OR IN BULK.— (What is meant by loose is 
weighed out in any quantity asked for.) All examinations made by Boards of Health, Govern- 
ment Chemists, and others, prove loose powders are, almost without exception, made from 
alum, and at a cost of about one tenth of what a pure Cream Tartar powder, like the " Royal 
Baking Powder, can be made for. The argument that the consumer will save, in the purchase 
of such poisonous stuff, the cost of can, label, etc., is used simply to enable the seller to make 
a larger profit in selling an alum bulk, or loose, powder at the expense of the unsuspecting 
consumer, than can be made by selling the absolutely pure " Royal " brand. Remember this, 
and insist on getting the " Royal " in cans. 

Do not buy alum baking powders under any circumstances. 



GENERAL DIRECTIONS 

MUST BE CAREFULLY READ BY EVERY ONE USING THIS BOOK 



HINTS ON BAKING. — To achieve perfect success, the cook must use discrimination and 
care. Some flour requires more water, or milk, than others ; so that the quantity 
may have to he varied to make dough of a proper consistency. Different bakings will 
vary as to time and heat required, and should, therefore, be examined occasionally. To 
ascertain whether the bread is sufficiently done in the center of the loaf or cake, thrust a clean 
straw or long thin splinter into it. If done, there will be no dough on it when drawn out. 
Measure the flour, and be careful to mix with it the baking powder in a dry state, and before sift- 
ing. You can always substitute water for milk, or milk for water ; butter for lard, or lard for 
butter. The number of eggs may be increased or diminished, or, in plainer cake, etc. , dispensed 
with entirely. Where fewer eggs are used than directed, always use a little more baking 
powder. Never use sour milk. 

When about to cut new bread or cake, heat the knife very hot ; this will prevent its 
crumbling. 

CAKE BAKING. — For a plain cake made with one pound of flour, Royal Baking Powder, 
etc., the time to be allowed in baking would be from 40 to 50 minutes ; at the outside not more 
than 1 hour. Very rich cakes, in which butter and eggs predominate, take, of course, very 
much longer time to bake, a pound cake taking from IVij to 2 hours, and a bride's cake 3Vk. 
On no account should an oven be too hot when the cake is put in — that is, hot enough to 
brown at once ; if so, in 5 minutes the whole outside will be burned and the interior will stand 
little chance of being baked. The old plan of feeling the handle of the oven door to test the 
heat is not always successful ; it is better to sprinkle a little flour inside and shut the door for 
about 3 minutes ; if at the end of that time it is of a rich light brown, the cake may be put in, 
but if burned the heat must be lessened. 

In baking loaf cake, remember that unless you place a piece of paper over for protection at 
first, a top crust will be formed at once that prevents the raising. When cake is well raised, 
remove the paper for browning on top. 

ADVICE TO THE COOK. — Great cleanliness, as well as care and attention, are required 
from a cook. Keep your hands very clean ; try to prevent your nails from getting black or 
discolored; don't "scatter "in your kitchen; clean up as you go; put cold water into each 
saucepan or stewpan as you finish using it. Dry your saucepans before you put them on the 
shelf. Scour tins with good mineral soap and rinse thoroughly in hot water. In cleaning a 
frying-pan, scour the outside as well as the inside. In cleaning greasy utensils, such as the 
soup-pot and frying-pan, wipe off the worst of the grease with soft paper (which can be 
burned), then soak in warm water to which soap-powder or a little ammonia has been added, 
finishing with mineral soap. Wash your pudding-cloths, scald, and hang them to dry directly 
after using them ; air them before you put them away, or they will be musty : keep in dry 
place. Be careful not to use a knife that has cut onions till it has been cleaned. Keep sink 
and sink-brush very clean ; be careful never to throw anything but water down sink. Do not 
throw cabbage water down it ; throw it away out of doors ; its smell is very bad. Never have 
Sticky plates or dishes ; use very hot water for washing them ; when greasy, change it. Take 
care that you look at the meat the butcher brings, to see that it is good. Let there be no 
waste in the kitchen. 



Bread and Rolls 

BREAD was first made without leaven, 
heavy and solid. Then yeast was dis- 
covered, and yeast-risen bread came into 
use throughout the civilized world. Finally 
baking powder was devised, the most health- 
ful, economical, and convenient of all leavening 
or lightening agents. 

Yeast is a living plant. Mixed with the 
dough it causes fermentation and destruction 
©f a part of the flour, and this produces car- 



bonic-acid gas. The bubbles of this gas become 
entangled in the dough, swelling it up and 
making it spongy. In this process, however, 
a part of the most nutritious elements of the 
flour (estimated at ten per cent.) is destroyed 
in producing the leavening gas ; there is al- 
ways danger of sour dough, and there is a 
delay of many hours for the sponge to rise. 

Perfect bread is that in which wheat is trans- 
posed into an available food without loss of 
any of its valuable properties. 

Royal Baking Powder is now largely used in 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



place of yeast to leaven bread. It does pre- 
cisely the same work — that is, swells up the 
dough and makes it porous and spongy. But 
the process is not destructive: the baking 
powder by itself produces the leavening gas. 
No part of the flour is decomposed or de- 
stroyed. Moreover, there is no mixing or 
kneading with the hands, no setting of sponge 
overnight, as the loaf is mixed and ready for 
the oven at once. Bread thus made cannot 
sour, but will retain its moisture and freshness, 
and may be eaten while hot or fresh without 
distress even by persons of delicate digestion. 

The ease with which Royal Baking Powder 
bread is made, its cleanliness and healthful- 
ness, have caused it to supersede yeast bread 
with many of the best pastry cooks. 

In making this bread the materials and 
utensils should be brought together before the 
mixing of the dough is begun. Tbe fire must 
be looked to so as to secure a steady, moderate 
heat. Remember to mix the flour and Royal 
Baking Powder together before sifting, and 
sift thoroughly before wetting. 

Royal Baking Powder Bread.— 1 quart flour, 
1 teaspoon salt, Mi teaspoon sugar, 2 heap- 
ing teaspoons Royal Baking Powder,* Mi 
medium-sized cold boiled potato, and water. 
Sift together thoroughly flour, salt, sugar, and 
baking powder ; rub in the potato ; add suffi 



spoon salt, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, 
1 tablespoon butter or lard, \ pint milk. Sift 
together corn meal, rye flour, sugar, salt, and 
powder. Rub in the shortening ; add the milk, 
and mix the whole into a batter. Put into 
greased tin (fig. XII), and bake about 40 min- 
utes in rather hot oven. Protect at first with 
paper. 

Brown Bread, 2.— Mix together 3 cups 
Graham flour, 1 cup wheat flour, 2 teaspoons 
Royal Baking Powder, 1 teaspoon salt ; rub in 
1 tablespoon butter or other shortening. Beat 
3 eggs ; add 1 cup milk and 1 tablespoon mo- 
lasses ; stir into dry mixture. Add more milk 
if needed to make a drop batter. Put into a 
greased loaf-pan (fig. XII), smooth with knife 
dipped in cold water. Bake about 1 hour in 
moderate oven. 

Boston Brown Bread. — Mi pint flour, 1 
pint Indian corn meal, Mi pint rye flour, 2 po- 
tatoes, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 tablespoon brown 
sugar, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, Mi 
pint water. Sift flour, corn meal, rye flour, 
sugar, salt, and baking powder together thor- 
oughly. Peel, wash, and boil well 2 mealy po- 
tatoes, rub them through a sieve, diluting with 
water. When this is quite cold use it to mix 
flour, etc. , into a batter. Pour into well-greased 
mold (tig. VI) having a cover. Place it in 
saucepan half full of boiling water, where the 
loaf will simmer 1 hour, without water getting 
into it. Remove it then, take off cover, finish 
by baking in fairly hot oven about 30 minutes. 



cient water to mrx smoothly and rapidly into a J Bosto n Brown Bread, 2.- 1 cup com meal, 
stiff dough, about the consistency of cake bat- , 2 beaping cups j^ meal x teaspoon salt, m\ 
ter: about a pint of water to a quart of flour , teaspoon soda, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking Pow- 
-more or less according to the d ^ cupmolas8e8 . Mix dry ingredients ; add 



will be required 

brand and quality of the flour used 



Do not 



molasses and 1 pint warm water ; beat smooth. 



make a stiff dough as in yeast bread. Put the j p our at once ^ greased mold \ &gm VI) ^ 



dough into a greased pan iMi by 8 inches, and 
4 inches deep, filling about half full. The loaf 
will rise to fill the pan when baked. Bake in 
very hot oven about 45 minutes, placing paper 
over first 15 minutes' baking, to prevent crust 
ing too soon on top. 
mixing. 

Household Bread. — Sift twice together 1 
quart of flour, 1 teaspoon salt, 2 heaping tea- 
spoons Royal Baking Powder. Make a well 
in the center ; add gradually sufficient cold 
liquid — water, milk, or equal quantities of 
each — to mix to a stiff batter or soft dough ; 
this will require about 1 pint of liquid. Turn 
at once into a greased loaf -pan (fig. XII), 
smooth the top with a knife clipped in melted 
butter, and bake immediately in a moderate 
oven about 1 hour. When done take from the 
pan, moisten with the hand dipped in cold 
water, wrap in bread-cloth till cold. 

Graham Unfermented Bread.— lMi pints 
Graham flour, Mi pint flour, 1 tablespoon sugar, 
1 teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking 
Powder, l l 4 pints milk, or equal parts milk 
and water. Sift together Graham flour, flour, 
sugar, salt, and powder; add the milk, or milk 
and water ; mix rapidly into soft dough, which 
put into greased tin (fig. XII). Bake in rather 
hot oven about 40 minutes. Protect loaf with 
paper first 15 minutes. 

Brown Bread. — 1 pint Indian corn meal, 1 
pint rye flour, 1 teaspoon brown sugar, 1 tea- 

* Perfect success can be had only with the Royal Baking 
Powder. 



cover, steam or boil 3 hours, 
in oven 10 minutes. 



Uncover, set 



Boston Brown Bread, 3. — 2 cups yellow 
Indian corn meal, 1 cup rye meal, 1 cup flour, 
Bake immediately after | 2 cups milk, 1 cup molasses, Mi teaspoon salt, 
3 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder. Mix well 
together, pour into greased brown-bread mold, 
steam 4 hours. Dry off 10 minutes in mod- 
erate oven. 

Norwegian Bread (for Dyspeptics). — 1 

pint barley meal, V2 pint Graham flour. Mi pint 
flour, 1 teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoons Royal Bak- 
ing Powder, 1 pint milk. Sift together barley 
meal, Graham flour, flour, salt, and powder ; 
mix into firm batter with the milk ; pour into 
greased tin (fig. XII), bake in moderate oven 
about 40 minutes. Cover with paper 20 
minutes. 

Oatmeal Bread. — Mi pint oatmeal, 1 Mi pints 
flour. Mi teaspoon salt, 3 teaspoons Royal Bak- 
ing Powder, 3 4 pint milk. Boil oatmeal in lMi 
pints salted water 1 hour ; add milk ; set 
aside until cold. Then place in bowl, sift to- 
gether flour, salt, and powder, and add. Mix 
smoothly and deftly. Bake in greased tin (fig. 
XII) about 45 minutes, protected with paper 
20 minutes. 

Peculiars. — 1 pint flour, sifted with 1 tea- 
spoon Royal Baking Powder and a little salt ; 
add 1 egg ; mix with 1 pint sweet milk, beat 
well to a batter, and bake quickly in buttered 
gem-pans already hot. 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



Pennsylvania Brown Bread.— Mix well 
together 1 quart Graham flour, 1 pint Indian 
corn meal, 2 scant teaspoons salt, 2 scant tea- 
spoons Royal Baking Powder. Dissolve 1 scant 
teaspoon soda in 1 teaspoon boiling water; 
mix with 1 cup molasses. To the dry ingre- 
dients add 1 quart cold water, then the mo- 
lasses. Beat 1 minute, pour into 2 well-greased 
molds, steam or boil 4 hours. Dry off on pan 
in moderate oven 10 minutes. 

Graham Lunch Bread.— lMi pints Gra- 
ham flour, Mi pint flour, 1 tablespoon sugar, 1 
teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking Pow- 
der, 34 pint milk. Sift together Graham 
flour, flour, sugar, salt, and powder ; add the 
mil k ; mix into smooth dough that can be easily 
handled. Flour the board, turn out dough, 
give it a quick, vigorous additional kneading to 
complete its smoothness ; then divide into four 
large pieces, which form into long loaves, lay 
them just touching in a square shallow cake- 
pan (fig. XIII), wash them over with milk. 
Bake in rather hot oven 30 minutes. When 
removing from oven rub them over with a lit- 
tle butter on a clean piece of linen. 

Corn Bread (New Orleans). — lMi pints In- 
dian corn meal, Mi pint flour. 1 tablespoon 
sugar, 1 teaspoon salt, 2 heaping teaspoons 
Royal Baking Powder, 1 tablespoon butter or 
lard, 114 pints milk, 2 eggs. Sift together corn 
meal, flour, sugar, salt, and powder ; rub in the 
shortening, add eggs (beaten) and the milk ; 
mix into a moderately stiff batter ; pour from 
bowl into shallow cake-pan (fig. XIII). Bake 
in rather hot oven 30 minutes. 

St. Charles Corn Bread.— Beat 2 eggs, add 
1 pint milk, 1 pint Indian corn meal, 1 table- 
spoon melted butter, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 tea- 
spoon Royal Baking Powder. Beat hard 2 
minutes, pour into greased pan (fig. XIII), 
bake about 30 minutes in hot oven. 

Loaf Corn-Bread. — Scald 1 pint milk; dis- 
solve in it 1 tablespoon butter, Mi cup sugar, 
1 teaspoon salt. While on fire sift in sufficient 
Indian corn meal to make a thick mush, cook 5 
minutes, and set away till cold ; add 3 beaten 
eggs, 2 cups flour mixed with 2 teaspoons Royal 
Baking Powder, and turn into greased loaf- 
pan. Bake about 2 hours in moderate oven, 
and serve hot. 

Nonpareil Corn Bread.— 2 heaping cups In- 
dian corn meal, 1 cup flour, 2Mi cups milk, 1 
tablespoon lard, 2 tablespoons sugar, 2 tea- 
spoons Royal Baking Powder, 1 teaspoon salt. 
Beat 2 eggs, whites and yolks separately. Sift 
together dry ingredients, melt lard. Mix all 
together, beat hard 1 minute, turn into greased 
shallow pan, and bake about Mi hour in hot 
oven. 

Spider Corn Bread.— Beat 2 eggs with 2 
tablespoons sugar. Add 1 pint milk, 1 tea- 
spoon salt, lMs cup Indian corn meal, Mi cup 
flour, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking Powder. In a 
spider melt 2 tablespoons butter ; turn so as to 
grease sides. Pour in batter, add 1 cup milk, 
but do not stir. Bake about 30 minutes in hot 
oven. When done it should have a streak of 
custard through the middle. 

Rice and Indian Bread. — Beat 3 eggs very 
light; add 1 pint milk, 2 cups white Indian 
corn meal, 1 cup cold boiled rice, 2 tablespoons 



melted butter, Mi teaspoon sa't, 2 teaspoons 
Royal Baking Powder, Mi cup more milk. Beat 
hard, bake in shallow greased pan in hot oven. 

Delicate Graham Bread (for Invalids). — 

1 pint Graham flour, 1 pint flour, 1 teaspoon 
sugar, 1 of salt, 2 of Royal Baking Powder. 
Sift all well together, rejecting coarse bran 
left in sieve ; addlVa pints milk. Mis quickly 
into smooth, soft dough. Bake in 2 small 
greased tins (fig. XII) 25 minutes. Protect 
with paper 10 minutes. 

Entire Wheat Bread.— 1 quart entire 
wheat flour, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon sugar, 

2 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder. Sift all 
well together; add sufficient liquid (water, 
milk, or equal quantities of each) to mix to a 
very thick batter or soft dough. Turn at once 
into a greased loaf-pan (fig. XII), smooth with 
knife dipped in cold water, and bake about 1 
hour in moderate oven. 

Rye Bread. — 1 pint rye flour, Mi pint Indian 
corn meal, Mi pint wheat flour, 1 teaspoon 
sugar, 1 teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoons Royal Bak- 
ing Powder, 1 tablespoon butter or lard, 34 pint 
milk. Sift together rye flour, corn meal, flour, 
sugar, salt, and powder ; rub in the shorten- 
ing ; add milk. Mix into smooth batter. Pour 
into well-greased tin (fig. XII), bake in moder- 
ate oven about 45 minutes. Protect loaf with 
paper first 20 minutes. 

Mush Bread. — 1 pint milk cooked in a dou- 
ble boiler, with sufficient Indian corn meal to 
make a thick mush. Cook 1 hour ; add 1 table- 
spoon butter ; stir, let cool ; add 3 eggs, whites 
and yolks beaten separately, 1 cup flour, Mi tea- 
spoon salt, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking Powder. 
Turn into shallow greased pan, bake 40 min- 
utes in moderate oven. 

Rice Bread. — 1 cup cold boiled rice, 1 cup 
white Indian corn meal, 1 cup wheat flour, 1 
teaspoon Royal Baking Powder. 2 eggs, Mi tea- 
spoon salt, 1 tablespoon melted butter, 1 cup 
milk. Mix the dry ingredients ; add beaten 
eggs mixed with milk and the melted butter. 
Pour into shallow greased pans. Bake 30 min- 
utes in a moderate oven. 

Hominy Bread. — Mix together 1 pint soft- 
boiled hominy, 1 teaspoon salt, 2 tablespoons 
melted butter, 4 beaten eggs, 2 cups milk. 
Mix together 1 cup flour, 2 teaspoons Royal 
Baking Powder ; add to batter, with more flour 
if needed to mix to a drop batter. Beat hard, 
bake in a shallow pan in very hot oven. 

Graham Rolls. — 1 pint Graham flour, 1 pint 
wheat flour, 1 teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoons Royal 
Baking Powder, 1 tablespoon butter or lard, 
\ pint milk. Sift together Graham flour, flour, 
salt, and powder; rub in the shortening; add 
milk, and mix the whole into smooth dough 
that can be handled — not too soft ; flour board, 
turn it out, and form into rolls shape and size 
of large fingers. Lay them on baking-sheet 
(fig. XIV) so that they will not touch. Wash 
their surfaces with soft brush (fig. XI) dipped 
in milk to glaze them. Bake in hot oven 
from 10 to 12 minutes. 

Breakfast Rolls. — 1% pints flour, Mz pint 
Indian corn meal (white), 1 teaspoon salt, 2 
teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, 1 tablespoon 
butter or lard, 34 pint milk. Sift together 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



flour, corn meal, salt, and powder; rub in 
shortening ; add the milk, mix smoothly into 
rather firmer dough than usual. Flour the 
board, turn out the dough, give it 1 or 2 turns 
to complete its smoothness. Divide it, thus 
prepared, into pieces size of an egg ; again di- 
vide these in half, which roll out under the 
hand until they are long and half the size of 
one's little finger. Lay on greased baking- 
tin (fig XIV) so that they do not touch, wash 
them over with milk. Bake in hot oven 7 or 8 
minutes. 



Lunch Rolls. — 1 quart flour, 1 teaspoon salt, 
2 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, 1 tablespoon 
butter or lard, 1 pint milk. Sift together 
flour, salt, and powder ; rub in the shortening ; 
add milk, mix to a smooth dough to be easily 
handled. Flour the board, turn out dough, give 
1 or 2 quick kneadings to give it smoothness. 
Roll out little over Mi inch thick, cut out with 
round cutter about 2Mi inches in diameter ; 
lay them on greased baking-tin (fig. XIV), 
just touching (in rows evenly), wash over with 
milk, bake in fairly hot oven 25 minutes. 
Wash them over again with milk when taken 
from oven. 



Twist Rolls. — Prepare dough as for lunch 
rolls. Cut in pieces size of egg. Roll each 
with hands into plain roll tapering at ends 
and 5 inches long. Lay 3 together ; begin in 
middle and braid to end ; turn over and braid 
opposite end. Mold and twist all the pieces of 
dough in the same way. Lay well apart on 
flat greased pans. Brush with milk, bake 
golden brown in very hot oven. 



Dinner Rolls. — Prepare dough as for lunch 
rolls, but slightly stiffer. Knead and roll out 
quite thin. Cut in strips 3 inches wide. Roll 
strips up very tight; they should not be too 
thick. Lay well apart on greased flat pans, 
brush with milk, and bake in very hot oven. 

French Rolls. — Make dough as for lunch 
rolls. Knead on board. Divide into pieces 
size of an egg. Form each into a short, thick, 
tapering roll. Put together by twos, side by 
side, pinching ends together a little. Place 
on flat greased pans. Brush with milk. Bake 
in very hot oven. 

Parker House Rolls. — Prepare firm dough 
as for dinner rolls. Knead and roll out % 
inch thick. Cut into 3-inch circles. Press 
pencil down across middle of each ; rub edges 
with soft butter. Double each, lay 1 inch 
apart on flat greased pans. Brush with milk, 
and bake in hot oven. 



Fruit Rolls. — Mix together 1 quart flour, 1 
teaspoon salt, 2 tablespoons sugar, 2 teaspoons 
Royal Baking Powder; rub in 2 tablespoons 
butter. Cut fine V4 pound citron, seed and 
halve V\ pound raisins. Mix fruit evenly with 
dry ingredients, make to a firm dough with 
milk. Knead on board for a moment, divide 
into pieces size of egg, make into long rolls, 
lay 1 inch apart on flat greased pans, brush 
with milk. Bake in a very hot oven. 

THE ROYAL BAKING 



Hot Biscuits, Cakes, and 
Muffins 



EXPERIENCED housekeepers agree that 
breakfast is difficult to cater for. Even 
the appetite ordinarily easy to satisfy is 
likely to be captious when approaching the 
first meal of the day. Every article of food 
upon the breakfast-table, therefore, should be 
perfect — the coffee as clear as amber, the 
bacon white and crisp, the biscuits flaky, ten- 
der, delicious. 

As a nation we approve of hot-breads, and 
most of all at the breakfast-table. And while 
we eat and enjoy them, we have the satisfac- 
tion of knowing that American methods and 
American cookery have made them healthful 
as well as appetizing and nutritious. 

And of all the breakfast foods, nothing is 
so appetizing, so appetite-whetting, so always 
dependable, so satisfying, as the light, flaky, 
hot biscuit, with a crisp, brown crust, just 
from the oven, broken apart without use of 
knife, and spread with butter; or, to top off 
the meal, with honey, jam, or marmalade. 

The very simplicity of the methods of mak- 
ing and the familiar, every-day use of this 
little hot bread-morsel have, however, some- 
times led to lack of care in its preparation, so 
that we too seldom find it in perfection upon 
our tables. 

It is the object of this chapter to stimulate 
an interest in and awaken a love for this most 
healthful and economical of our purely Ameri- 
can foods, so that it will be found, as it de- 
serves to be, a prominent part of every day's 
food in every household. 

With a basis of flour, salt, and Royal Baking 
Powder, we can add other ingredients to vary 
and enrich the cakes and biscuits generally 
known to the housewife, and produce in al- 
most endless variety breakfast and luncheon 
foods that shall be dainty and delicious or sub- 
stantial and hearty. 

Are eggs scarce and high, does too much 
shortening disagree with some member of the 
family, Royal Baking Powder permits the les- 
sening of both or either of these ingredients, 
without impairing the delicacy or digestibility 
of the finished biscuit. 

Royal Baking Powder is pure and healthful, 
and its use in excess can produce no harm ; yet 
for cooking results it is best to be guided by the 
quantity specified in the receipts. Baking 
powder could be added until a dry, powdery 
biscuit resulted. 

The mixing of the baking powder, flour, and 
other dry ingredients should be thorough. 
This is imperative if a delicate, evenly leav- 
ened biscuit is wanted. The other ingredients 
can then be added, following the special direc- 
tions as given in each receipt. 

POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



In using shortening for biscuits, especially 
through the winter season, with some limita- 
tion, good, sweet home-made lard may take 
the place of butter. Butter will color slightly 
yellow ; lard will whiten the biscuits. This 
substitution will not do when considerable 
shortening is called for, as in cake ; but in 
receipts where the quantity does not exceed 
2 ounces or tablespoons to the quart of flour, 
butter may, in the majority of cases, be replaced 
by lard without impairing the taste. 

Biscuits are mixed to a soft dough, which is 
turned out, patted down or rolled to a proper 
thickness, and then cut out and baked. From 
long experience it has been found that the re- 
sult is much better and the food more digestible 
when the finished biscuit is small and not too 
thick. The scientific reason for this is that the 
oven heat necessaryforbiscuit,if they are made 
very large, will brown the outside before the 
center is as thoroughly baked as it ought to be. 
The dough should be rolled out until Mi inch 
thick ; the biscuits should be of medium size, — 
2 inches or less across, — and placed slightly 
apart in the pans. A favorite cutter of expert 
biscuit-makers is the open end (not the cover) 
of a V4 -pound Royal Baking Powder can. A 
good oven heat will bake the biscuit perfectly 
in from 15 to 20 minutes, and even a dyspeptic 
can eat them without fear of consequences. 
The biscuit may, of course, be made thicker or 
thinner, as more or less of the soft inside part 
may be preferred, but the time of baking must 
be regulated accordingly. 

The same directions will apply to hot baking 
powder breads made with a batter. If baked 
in a sheet the batter should rarely be more 
than an inch deep in the pan, sometimes less ; 
if in cups or molds they should not be more 
than % full. This allows the heat to pene- 
trate the mixture quickly ; the moisture and 
heat start the baking powder into life ; each 
tiny grain of the powder acts on the materials 
surrounding it ; the dough or batter expands, 
then is stiffened by the heat, and all the starch 
grains are thoroughly and evenly cooked. 

Royal Hot Biscuit. — 1 quart flour, 1 tea- 
spoon salt, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, 
1 tablespoon lard or butter, 1 pint sweet milk, 
cold (never use sour milk) ; use cold water 
when milk cannot be obtained. Sift together 
flour, salt, and powder; rub in shortening; 
add milk; form into smooth, consistent dough. 
Flour the board, turn out dough, roll out to 
thickness of Mi inch, cut with small round cut- 
ter ; lay them close together on greased bak- 
ing-tin ; bake in good hot oven. Old biscuit 
can be made fresh by moistening and placing in 
oven until heated through. 

Breakfast Biscuit.— Take 1 quart sweet 
milk, Mi cup melted butter, a little salt, 2 tea- 
spoons Royal Baking Powder, flour enough to 
make a stiff batter ; do not knead into dough, 
but drop into buttered tins from a spoon ; bake 
in a hot oven — unless it is hot they will not 
be light and tender. 



Emergency Biscuit.— 2 cups flour, Mi tea- 
spoon salt, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking Powder; 
mix and sift ; rub in 1 tablespoon butter. Mix 
to a thick batter with milk, drop by small 
spoonfuls on greased pans, and bake in quick 
oven. 

Egg Biscuit.— Mix and sift well together 1 
pint flour, Mi teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon sugar, 
1 teaspoon Royal Baking Powder. Beat 1 egg, 
add Mi cup milk, stir into dry mixture, adding 
more milk if necessary to mix to soft dough. 
Turn out on board, knead for a moment, cut 
into circles, place 1 inch apart on greased pans. 
Brush with little beaten egg, and bake in very 
hot oven. 

Sandwich Biscuit. — Sift together 1 pint 
flour, % teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon Royal Bak- 
ing Powder. Rub in 1 heaping tablespoon but- 
ter. Mix to a soft dough with milk. Roll out 
% inch thick. Cut into rounds. On Mt of the 
rounds spread a little soft butter, add a thick 
layer of finely chopped and seasoned cold 
meat ; cover with remaining rounds and press 
together. Brush tops with milk, place 1 inch 
apart on greased pans, and bake in hot oven. 

Nut Biscuit. — Sift together 2 cups flour, % 
teaspoon salt, 1 heaping teaspoon Royal Bak- 
ing Powder. Rub in 1 heaping tablespoon but- 
ter, add 1 cup ground or very finely chopped 
nuts — English walnuts, hickory -nuts, or 
almonds — and 2 tablespoons sugar ; mix to a 
soft dough with milk. Mold with the hands 
into small balls, place well apart on greased 
pans, brush each with milk, put a pinch of 
chopped nuts on top, and bake in hot oven. 

Diamonds. — Prepare dough as for Royal 
biscuit. Knead and roll out M> inch thick. 
Cut in strips 2 inches wide, then cut strips 
into diamonds ; place on greased pans 1 inch 
apart, brush with milk, and bake in very hot 
oven. 



Royal Muffins. — Beat 3 eggs, add 1 pint 
milk, Mi teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon sugar, and 
sufficient flour to make a drop batter — about 
3 cups — into which has been thoroughly sifted 
2 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder. Beat hard 
for 1 minute, fill greased muffin-cups or -pans 
% full, bake in hot oven about 20 minutes. 

Boston Muffins. — lMi pints flour, Mi pint 
Indian corn meal, 1 tablespoon sugar, 1 tea- 
spoon salt, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, 
1 tablespoon butter, 3 eggs, and 1 pint (full 
measure) milk, 1 teaspoon extract cinnamon 
(which may be omitted without detriment). 
Sift together flour, corn meal, sugar, salt, and 
powder ; rub in butter or lard ; add eggs, 
beaten, milk, and extract cinnamon. Mix into 
batter a little stiffer than ordinary griddle- 
cake batter. Have griddle heated regularly all 
over; grease it, lay on it muffin-rings, also 
greased ; half fill them with batter. As soon 
as risen to tops of rings, turn them over gently 
with cake-turner; bake nice brown on either 
side. They should bake in 7 or 8 minutes. 

French Muffins. — lMi pints flour, 1 cup 
honey, Mi teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoons Royal 
Baking Powder, 2 tablespoons butter, 3 eggs, 
and little over Mi pint milk or thin cream. 
Sift together flour, salt, and powder; rub in 
butter, cold; add beaten eggs, milk or thin 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



6 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



cream, and honey. Mix smoothly into batter 
as for pound cake; about Mi fill sponge-cake 
tins, cold and fully greased, and bake in good 
steady oven 7 or 8 minutes. 

Rice Muffins. — 2 cups cold boiled rice, 1 
pint flour, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 tablespoon sugar, 
IMi teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, Mi pint 
milk, 3 eggs. Dilute rice, made free from 
lumps, with milk and beaten eggs; sift to- 
gether flour, sugar, salt, and powder ; add to 
rice preparation, mix into smooth, rather firm 
batter; muffin-pans (fig. VII) to be cold and 
well greased, then fill % ; bake in hot oven 15 
minutes. 

Hominy Muffins.— Same as rice muffins, 
substituting 1 cup boiled hominy for the rice. 

Royal Sally-Lunn Muffins.— 1 quart flour, 
1 tablespoon sugar, 1 teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoons 
Royal Baking Powder, 1 tablespoon butter or 
lard, 1 egg, 1V 4 pints milk. Sift together 
flour, sugar, salt, and powder ; rub in shorten- 
ing; add egg, beaten, and milk; mix into 
rather firm batter ; muffin-pans to be cold and 
well greased, then fill %. Bake in hot oven 
15 minutes. 

Rye Muffins.— 1 pint rye flour, Mi pint corn 
meal, Mi pint flour, 1 teaspoon sugar, 1 tea- 
spoon salt, 3 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, 
1 tablespoon butter, 2 eggs, 1 pint milk. Sift 
together rye flour, corn meal, flour, sugar, 
salt, and powder ; rub in butter ; add beaten 
eggs, and milk ; mix into smooth, rather firm 
batter ; muffin-pans to be cold and well greased, 
then fill %. Bake in hot oven 15 minutes. 

Royal Corn Muffins.— 1 pint Indian corn 
meal, 1 pint flour, 1 tablespoon sugar, 1 tea- 
spoon salt, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, 

1 tablespoon butter or lard, 2 eggs, 1 pint milk. 
Sift together corn meal, flour, sugar, salt, and 
powder ; rub in the shortening, add eggs, beaten, 
and milk ; mix into batter of consistence of cup 
cake ; muffin-pans to be cold and well greased, 
then fill %. Bake in hot oven 15 minutes. 

English Muffins. — 1 quart flour, Mi tea- 
spoon sugar, 1 teaspoon salt, 2 large teaspoons 
Royal Baking Powder, IV4 pints milk. Sift 
together flour, sugar, salt, and powder; add 
milk, and mi-x into smooth batter trifle stiffer 
than for griddle cakes. Have griddle heated 
regularly all over, grease it, and lay on muffin- 
rings (fig. XVII) ; half fill them, and when risen 
well up to top of rings, turn over gently with 
cake-turner. They should not be too brown — 
just a buff color. When all cooked, pull each 
open in half, toast delicately, butter well, serve 
on folded napkin, piled high and very hot. 

Mountain Muffins. — Pour IV4 cups scald- 
ing milk on 1 cup white Indian corn meal ; 
cover ; let stand 10 minutes ; add 1 cup cold 
boiled rice ; mix ; add 1 cup flour mixed with 
3 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, 2 tablespoons 
sugar, 1 teaspoon salt, 2 well-beaten eggs, 2 
tablespoons melted butter. Beat hard; bake in 
greased muffin-pans in hot oven. 

Berry Muffins. — 1 pint flour, V4 teaspoon 
salt, 2 tablespoons melted butter, V4 cup sugar, 

2 small teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, 1 egg, 
1 cup milk, 1 cup berries. Mix as for plain 
muffins ; add berries last, dusting them with a 
little flour. Bake in muffin-pans in hot oven. 



Graham Muffins. — 1 quart Graham flour, 

1 tablespoon brown sugar, 1 teaspoon salt, 2 
teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, 1 egg, 1 pint 
milk. Sift together Graham flour, sugar, salt, 
and powder ; add beaten egg and milk ; mix 
into batter like pound cake ; muffin-pans (fig. 
VII.), well greased, % full ; bake in hot oven 
15 minutes. 

Oatmeal Muffins. — 1 cup oatmeal, IMi pints 
flour, 1 teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking 
Powder, 1 tablespoon lard, 2 eggs, 1 pint milk. 
Sift together oatmeal, flour, salt, and powder ; 
rub in lard cold, add beaten eggs and milk ; 
mix smoothly into batter rather thinner than 
cup cake; fill muffin-pans (fig. VII) % full; 
bake in good hot oven 15 minutes. 

Potato Muffins. — Boil and mash 3 potatoes; 
add 1 teaspoon salt, 1 tablespoon butter ; beat 
well. Add 2 beaten eggs, Mi cup milk, flour to 
make a drop batter, and 1 teaspoon Royal Bak- 
ing Powder. Bake on hot greased griddle in 
greased rings. 

Royal Egg Muffins. — 1 quart flour, 1 table- 
spoon sugar, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 large table- 
spoon butter, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, 
3 eggs, IV4 pints milk. Sift together flour, 
sugar, salt, and powder; rub in the butter; 
add the beaten eggs and milk ; mix quickly into 
a smooth batter, a little firmer than for grid- 
dle cakes ; % fill cold, carefully greased muffin- 
pans (fig. VII) ; bake in hot oven 15 minutes. 

Sweet Muffins. — 1 cup sugar, 1 egg, 1 table- 
spoon melted butter, 1 pint sweet milk, 3 cups 
flour, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, 1 
teaspoon salt. Mix and sift dry ingredients; 
add milk and beaten egg and butter. Beat 
hard, bake in greased muffin-pans. 

Butter Cakes. — Mix 1 quart flour, 1 tea- 
spoon salt, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder. 
Rub in 3 tablespoons butter. Mix to a soft 
dough with milk, roll out % inch thick, cut in 
round cakes. Lay on a moderately hot greased 
griddle, and when pale brown turn and brown 
on other side. Tear open, butter liberally, and 
send to table. 

Gems. — 1 pint flour, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking 
Powder, Mi teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon sugar, 3 
teaspoons melted butter, 1 cup milk, 3 eggs, 
whites and yolks beaten separately. Mix as 
for muffins, adding beaten whites last; bake in 
hot, well-greased iron gem-pans. 

Royal Graham Gems.— IMi pints Graham 
flour, Mi pint Indian corn meal, 1 teaspoon salt, 

2 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, IV4 pints 
milk. Sift together Graham flour, corn meal, 
salt, and powder. Add the milk, and mix into 
a moderately stiff batter. Mi fill cold gem-pans 
(fig. X), well greased. Bake in a solid hot oven 
10 to 12 minutes. 

Rice Gems.— 1 egg, 1 cup milk, 1 cup cold 
boiled rice, 1 cup flour, 1 teaspoon Royal Bak- 
ing Powder, V4 teaspoon salt, 1 tablespoon 
melted butter. Mix as for plain gems, and bake 
in hot oven in gem-pans. 

Apple Gems.— Chop fine 4 sour apples, add 
1 beaten egg, 2 tablespoons molasses, IMi cups 
Indian corn meal, 1^2 cups flour, Mi teaspoon 
salt, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder. Add 
sufficient milk to make thick drop batter, and 
bake in hot greased gem-pans. 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



Crumpets. — Melt 1 heaping tablespoon lard ; 
add 2 beaten eggs and IMi cups milk. Beat 
well, add 1 teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoons sugar, 
3 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder sifted with 
2Mi cups flour. Crumpet-rings are larger than 
muffin-rings. Put greased rings on hot greased 
griddle; fill % full with batter. Turn when 
half done. 

London Crumpets. — IMi pints flour, Mi tea- 
spoon salt, 1 teaspoon sugar, 2 teaspoons Royal 
Baking Powder, 1 egg, nearly a pint milk 
and cream in equal parts, 1 teaspoon extract 
cinnamon. Sift together flour, salt, sugar, 
and powder ; add beaten egg, milk, cream, 
and extract ; mix into rather firm batter ; half 
fill large greased muffin-rings (fig. XVII) on 
hot, well-greased griddle. Bake on one side 
of them only. Serve hot with cottage cheese. 

Rice Crumpets. — 3 eggs, IMi cups milk, 1 
cup cold boiled rice, 1 tablespoon melted butter, 
1 cup Indian corn meal, Mi cup flour, 2 tea- 
spoons Royal Baking Powder, Mi teaspoon salt. 
Mix in order named, and bake in crumpet- 
rings on hot greased griddle. 

Hominy Crumpets. — 1 scant cup boiled 
hominy, 2 cups milk, 1 tablespoon sugar, 1 tea- 
spoon salt, 2 tablespoons melted butter, enough 
flour to make thin drop batter, with 2 tea- 
spoons Royal Baking Powder sifted into the 
first cup. Bake as directed for plain crum- 
pets. 

Bannocks. — Scald 2 cups Indian corn meal 
with just enough boiling water to moisten. 
Cover; let stand 30 minutes; add 4 beaten 
eggs, 2 cups milk, 1 teaspoon salt, 2 tablespoons 
melted butter, 1 cup flour, 1 teaspoon Royal 
Baking Powder. Bake in greased shallow 
pans in hot oven. 

Slappers. — Put 2 cups Indian corn meal in 
bowl with Mi teaspoon salt and 2 tablespoons 
butter. Pour on slowly sufficient boiling 
water to thoroughly moisten without being 
sloppy. Cover; let stand for some hours or 
overnight. Add 3 well-beaten eggs, 1 cup milk, 
and 1 cup wheat flour, the first half-cupful of 
flour being mixed with 2 teaspoons Royal Bak- 
ing Powder, to make a very thick drop batter. 
Drop by spoonfuls on a hot greased griddle, 
cook slowly till brown, turn and brown other 
side. 

Scotch Scones. — 1 quart flour, 1 teaspoon 
sugar, Mi teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking 
Powder, 1 large tablespoon lard, 2 eggs, nearly 
1 pint milk. Sift together flour, sugar, salt, 
and powder ; rub in lard cold ; add beaten eggs 
and milk; mix into dough smooth and just 
consistent enough to handle. Flour the board, 
turn out dough, give it one or two quiek 
kneadings to complete its smoothness; roll it 
out with rolling-pin to Ms inch in thickness, 
cut with sharp knife into squares larger than 
soda crackers, fold each in half to form three- 
cornered pieces. Bake on hot griddle 8 or 10 
minutes ; brown on both sides. 

Hot Cross Buns. — Sift together 1 quart 
flour, Mi teaspoon salt, 1 cup sugar, 3 scant 
teaspoons Royal Baking Powder. Rub in Mi 
cup butter, then add Vi pound cleaned currants, 
Mi teaspoon nutmeg, >4 pound cut citron, Vi 
pound seeded raisins, Mi teaspoon allspice. 
Beat 2 eggs, add Mi cup milk, and stir into the 



dry mixture, adding enough more milk to mix 
to a firm dough. Mold into round buns, lay 2 
inches apart on greased pans, brush with milk. 
Cut cross on each, sprinkle cut with granulated 
sugar, bake in hot oven. 

German Coffee Cake.— Sift together 3 cups 
flour, Mi teaspoon salt, 3 tablespoons sugar, 2 
scant teaspoons Royal Baking Powder. Rub 
in 2 beaping tablespoons butter. Beat 2 eggs, 
add % cup milk, stir into dry mixture, adding 
more milk if necessary to mix to very stiff 
batter. Spread % inch thick in well-buttered 
shallow pan. Mix together 2 tablespoons flour, 
4 tablespoons granulated sugar, 1 heaping 
tablespoon cinnamon. Rub in 2 tablespoons 
butter until it is crumbly. Spread thickly 
over top of dough, bake about Mi hour in 
moderate oven. 

Drop Cakes. — 1 pint flour, Mi teaspoon salt, 
Mi teaspoon sugar, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking 
Powder sifted together. Rub in Mi tablespoon 
lard. Mix with milk to a thick batter. Drop 
by spoonfuls on greased pans, and bake in a 
very hot oven. 

Yorkshire Breakfast Cake.— Sift together 
3 cups flour, Mi teaspoon salt, 3 level teaspoons 
Royal Baking Powder. Rub in 1 heaping 
tablespoon butter. Mix to a soft dough with 
milk. Roll out Mi inch thick. Place without 
cutting on hot greased griddle, and cover. 
Place on moderate fire, cook about 10 minutes. 
Slip off on board, turn without breaking, re- 
turn to griddle and cook 10 minutes longer. 
Break into pieces and serve with butter. 

Royal Sally Lunns.— Sift together 1 pint 
flour, IMi teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, Mi 
teaspoon salt. Stir in the beaten yolks of 2 
eggs mixed with Mi cup niilk and Mi cup melted 
butter. Beat hard, add the whites whipped to 
a stiff froth. Bake in well-greased muffin- 
pans in a hot oven. 

Rusks. — IMi pints flour, Mi teaspoon salt, 2 
tablespoons sugar, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking 
Powder, 2 tablespoons butter, 3 eggs, 1 tea- 
spoon each extract nutmeg and cinnamon, 34 
pint milk. Sift together flour, salt, sugar, 
and powder ; rub in butter ; add milk, beaten 
eggs, and extracts. Mix into dough soft enough 
to handle; flour the board, turn out dough, 
give it quick turn or two to complete its 
smoothness. Roll under the hands into round 
balls size of a small egg; lay them on greased 
shallow cake-pan (fig. XIII), put very close to- 
gether, sprinkle a little sugar over, bake in 
moderately heated oven about 30 minutes. 

Yankee Puffs.— Mix together 1 Mi cups flour, 
V4 teaspoon salt, scant teaspoon Royal Baking 
Powder, 1 tablespoon sugar. Cream 1 table- 
spoon butter, add the beaten yolks of 2 eggs, 
then alternately the dry mixture and IMi cups 
milk, Mi teaspoon vanilla, whipped whites of 

2 eggs. Bake in hot greased muffin-pans in a 
hot oven. 

German Puffs. — 1 pint flour, 2 tablespoons 
sugar, IMi teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, 

3 tablespoons butter, 4 eggs, 1 cup cream. 
Cream butter and sugar; add beaten eggs, then, 
alternately, the cream and dry ingredients 
sifted together. Bake in well-greased cups in 
hot oven. 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



Fritters and Waffles 

FRITTERS are served as a vegetable or a 
sweet, for a lunch, dinner, or supper, 
according to the ingredients used in mak- 
ing them. Whether sweet or plain, the foun- 
dation batter is much the same, and, with some 
additions, the first receipt given in this chap- 
ter can be used for many kinds of fritters. 
By the use of Royal Baking Powder a fine frit- 
ter batter may be stirred up in a moment, and 
a meal which it may be thought necessary to 
extend, perhaps because of unexpected guests, 
can be embellished by the addition of a delicate 
and tasty dish. 

A fritter batter which is to be used as a 
medium for whole or sliced fruit should be 
quite thin, as it is to serve as a cover for the 
fruit. When chopped fruits or vegetables are 
stirred in, or the batter is to be used plain, it 
should be thick enough to retain its shape 
when dropped by spoonfuls into the frying- 
kettle. The fat should be deep enough to 
cover the fritters, and it should be smoking 
hot when used. Each fritter will at first sink 
to the bottom of the kettle ; then, as the heat 
starts the baking powder into action and the 
dough begins to swell, it will rise to the surface, 
and should be gently turned, the turning to be 
repeated until the fritter is finely colored. Most 
fritters are done within five minutes, the time 
needed to cook them being determined by one 
which should be cooked as a tester. 

The very word " waffles " brings to our minds 
a host of pleasant recollections. The only 
drawback, in the old days, was that they must be 
started so long before they were ready for the 
irons, for home-made yeast took time to raise 
the batter to the requisite degree of lightness. 
Now, by the use of Royal Baking Powder, they 
can be prepared in five minutes. They are 
better than of old, too, for there is no yeasty 
taste to them ; they are light, tender, and 
toothsome, and, what is most important, en- 
tirely digestible and wholesome. 

Plain Fritter Batter. — 1 cup flour, Vj, tea- 
spoon Royal Baking Powder, Vi teaspoon salt, 2 
eggs, 1 cup milk. Sift dry ingredients together; 
add beaten eggs and milk ; beat till smooth. 

Apple Fritters. — 4 large sound apples, 
peeled, cored, and cut each into 4 slices, ^ sill 
wine, 2 tablespoons sugar, 1 teaspoon extract 
nutmeg. Place slices of apples in bowl with 
sugar, wine, and extract ; cover with plate ; 
set aside to steep two hours, then dip each slice 
in plain fritter batter, fry to light brown in 
plenty of lard made hot for the purpose ; serve 
with sugar. 

Fruit Fritters. — Any kind of fruit may be 
made into fritters, as directed for apple frit- 
ters. Whole canned fruits, drained from 
syrup, may also be used. Apples and other 



fruits may also be prepared, coarsely chopped, 
stirred into a plain fritter batter, and dropped 
by small spoonfuls into smoking hot fat, finish- 
ing as already directed. 

Banana Fritters. — Peel bananas, cut in 
lengthwise slices. Let them steep an hour 
with sugar and lemon juice, dip in fritter bat- 
ter, and fry as directed for apple fritters. 

Corn Fritters. — To 1 pint scraped corn add 
% cup milk, Vi. cup flour, 1 tablespoon melted 
butter, 2 beaten eggs, 1 teaspoon salt, M» tea- 
spoon pepper, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking Pow- 
der. Beat well, and fry in small spoonfuls as 
directed. 

Clam Fritters. — Wash and dry 25 good- 
sized clams or 2 strings soft-shell clams, dis- 
carding black part. Chop fine. Make a plain 
fritter batter, using the clam liquor (or that 
and milk) in place of milk. Stir in the chopped 
clams, season well with salt and pepper, and 
fry as directed. 

Oyster Fritters. — Substitute oysters for 
clams as in above receipt. 

Pineapple Fritters — Sprinkte half -inch 
slices of fresh pineapple with sugar and sherry ; 
let stand 1 hour. Dip each into plain fritter 
batter, drop into deep kettle of smoking hot 
fat, fry brown. Drain on paper and sprinkle 
with powdered sugar. 

Strawberry Fritters. — Crush and sieve 
fresh berries to make 1 cup pulp. Add 3 beaten 
eggs, 1 teaspoon sugar, 1 cup flour mixed with 
1 teaspoon Royal Baking Powder and enough 
more flour to make thick drop batter. Fry in 
deep kettle of smoking hot fat, and serve with 
plenty of mashed berries. 

Meat Fritters. — Cut cold cooked meat in 
slices or fingers and dip in batter ; or chop and 
stir into the batter, seasoned with salt, pepper, 
and herbs or chopped onion, as desired. Fry 
as directed. 

Rice Fritters. — 1 cup rice, 1 pint milk, 3 
eggs, 1 tablespoon sugar, 2 tablespoons butter. 
Boil rice in milk until soft and all the milk is 
absorbed, then remove, add yolks of eggs, 
sugar, and butter; when cold add whites, 
whipped to dry froth ; drop in spoonfuls in 
plenty of lard, made hot for the purpose ; fry 
them deep buff color. Serve with cream, wine 
or lemon sauce. 

Hominy Fritters. — To 1 pint hot woded 
hominy add 2 beaten eggs, Mi teaspoon salt, 
dash of pepper, Vz cup milk. When cool add 
flour to make a thin drop batter, and 1 tea- 
spoon Royal Baking Powder. Beat and drop 
in h»t fat by small spoonfuls. 

Waff les.— Sift together 1 quart flour, Va 
teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon sugar, 2 teaspoons 
Royal Baking Powder. Rub in Ms cup butter. 
Add 3 eggs, whites and yolks beaten separately, 
and sufficient milk to make a thin batter. 
Cook in hot greased waffle-irons. 

Waffles, 2.— 1 quart milk, 2 teaspoons Royal 
Baking Powder mixed with 3 cups flour, 1 cup 
melted butter, Vi teaspoon salt, whites and 
yolks 6 eggs, more flour to make thin batter. 
Bake at once. 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



9 



German Waffles. — 1 quart flour, V2 tea- 
spoon salt, 3 tablespoons sugar, 2 large teaspoons 
Koyal Baking Powder, 2 tablespoons lard, rind 
of 1 lemon, grated, 1 teaspoon extract cinna- 
mon, 4eggs, audi pint thin cream. Sifttogether 
flour, sugar, salt, and powder; rub in lard 
cold ; add beaten eggs, lemon rind, extract, 
and milk. Mix into smooth, rather thick bat- 
ter. Bake in hot waffle-iron, serve with sugar 
flavored with extract of lemon. 

Soft Waffles. — 1 quart flour, Mi teaspoon 
salt, 1 teaspoon sugar, 2 teaspoons Royal Bak- 
ing Powder, 1 large tablespoon butter, 2 eggs, 
lMi pints milk. Sift together flour, salt, sugar, 
and powder; rub in butter cold; add beaten 
eggs and milk ; mix into smooth, consistent 
batter that will run easily and limpid from 
mouth of pitcher. Have waffle-iron hot and 
carefully greased each time ; fill %, close it up ; 
when brown turn over. Sift sugar on them, 
serve hot. 

Rice Waffles. — Into a batter as directed for 
soft waffles stir 1 cup of rice, free from lumps ; 
cook as directed in same receipt. 

Virginia Waffles. — Cook Mi cup white 
Indian corn meal in 1 Mi cups boiling water 30 
minutes, adding lMi teaspoons salt. Add IM2 
cups milk, 2 tablespoons sugar, 2 tablespoons 
melted butter, 2 cups flour mixed with 2 heap- 
ing teaspoons;Royal Baking Powder, and 2 eggs, 
whites and yolks beaten separately. Cook in 
hot, well-greased waffle-iron. 

Jolly-Boys. — Mix and sift together 3 cups 
rye meal, 1 cup flour, Mi cup Indian corn meal, 
Vi teaspoon powdered cinnamon, Mi teaspoon 
salt, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, and 
2 tablespoons sugar. Add 1 beaten egg, 2 
tablespoons molasses, and sufficient cold water 
to make a thick batter. Drop by small 
spoonfuls in a kettle of smoking hot fat, and 
cook till brown. 



Griddle Cakes, Etc. 

THE griddle cake as made to-day with 
Royal Baking Powder is another arti- 
cle of food which has taken high rank 
upon the American table. The heavy, sour, 
grease-soaked, indigestible griddle cake of old 
is. where modern methods are employed, a 
thing of the past. The properly made griddle 
cake is a delicious food, healthful, appetizing, 
and nutritious. 

Raising the griddle cake with yeast is alto- 
gether obsolete with expert cooks. Mixtures 
of soda, saleratus, sour milk, buttermilk, etc., 
are likewise not permissible. Royal Baking 
Powder has altogether redeemed the griddle 
cake. It makes the cake light, tender, digest- 
ible, and its preparation and baking are the 
work of a moment only. 

Royal Baking Powder, plain, sweet milk, 
flour, and a little salt make a food fit for a 
feast. What so simple, so easily prepared ? 
Eggs are altogether unessential. 



The batter must be thin, the cakes made 
small and not too thick, — about a good ^ inch 
thick when baked, — browned, and neatly 
turned. The griddle must be merely rubbed 
with grease, not grease-soaked. This is highly 
important. Take a thick piece of salt pork 
on a fork, or a lump of suet in a piece of 
cheese-cloth, and rub lightly over the hot grid- 
dle and pour the batter on immediately. 

Remember that buckwheat is one of the 
most difficult flours to lighten. Where it en- 
ters into combination with other materials this 
fact must be recognized and a somewhat larger 
proportion of Royal Baking Powder allowed. 
Made in the manner directed in these receipts 
buckwheat cakes can be safely and profusely 
eaten by every one. 

Royal Wheat Cakes.— This is the best plain 
hot griddle cake without eggs. The cakes will 
be light, tender, and healthful. 1 quart flour, 

3 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, Mi teaspoon 
salt. Sift well together and add sweet milk to 
make into a soft batter. Bake immediately on 
hot griddle. Should be full Vs inch thick when 
baked. Smother with butter and maple syrup 
or honey. 

Griddle Cakes with Eggs.— 3 cups flour, 2 
teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, 1 teaspoon 
salt. Mix well together, add 2 well-beaten 
eggs and sufficient sweet milk to make a thin 
drop batter. Bake at once on a hot, well- 
greased griddle. Make them thin. 

Graham Griddle Cakes.— 1 pint Graham 
flour, Mi pint Indian corn meal, Mi pint flour, 
1 heaping teaspoon brown sugar, Mi teaspoon 
salt, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, 1 egg, 
Mi pint each of milk and water. Sift together 
Graham flour, corn meal, flour, sugar, salt, 
and powder. Add beaten egg, milk, and water. 
Mix together into a smooth batter. Heat 
griddle hot, pour batter into cakes as large as 
a tea saucer. Bake brown on one side, care- 
fully turn and brown other side. Pile one on 
the other, serve very hot, with sugar, milk, 
cream, or maple syrup. 

Rye Griddle Cakes. — 1 pint rye flour, Mi 
pint Graham flour, Mi pint flour, 1 tablespoon 
sugar, Mi teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoons Royal 
Baking Powder, 1 egg, 1 pint milk. Sift 
together rye flour, Graham flour, sugar, salt, 
and baking powder, add beaten egg and milk, 
mix into smooth batter. Bake deep brown 
color on hot griddle. 

Geneva Griddle Cakes.— \Mt pints flour, 

4 tablespoons sugar, Mi teaspoon salt, lMi tea- 
spoons Royal Baking Powder, 2 tablespoons 
butter, 4 eggs, nearly V2 pint milk. Rub but- 
ter and sugar to white, light cream ; add yolks 
of eggs, 1 at a time. Sift flour, salt, and pow- 
der together; add to butter, etc., with milk 
and egg whites whipped to dry froth ; mix 
together into a smooth batter. Bake in small 
cakes ; as soon as brown, turn and brown the 
other side. Have buttered baking-tin ; fast as 
browned, lay them on it, and spread raspberry 
jam over them ; then bake more, which lay on 
others already done. Repeat this until you 
have used jam twice, then bake another batch, 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



10 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



which use to cover them. Sift sugar plenti- 
fully over them, place in a moderate oven to 
finish cooking. 

Three-Egg Griddle Cakes.— 3 cups milk, 2 
heaping cups flour, Mt teaspoon salt, 3 eggs, 2 
teaspoons Royal Baking Powder. Mix as for 
plain griddle cakes, adding whites and yolks 
of eggs beaten separately. 

Huckleberry Q riddle Cakes.— Mi pint huck- 
leberries, lMi pints flour, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 
tablespoon brown sugar, 2 teaspoons Royal 
Baking Powder, 2 eggs, 1 pint milk. Sift 
together flour, sugar, salt, and powder; add 
beaten eggs, milk, and huckleberries (washed 
and picked over). Mix into batter that will 
run from pitcher in thick, continuous stream. 
Have griddle hot enough to form crust soon as 
batter "touches it. In order to confine juice of 
berries, turn quickly, so as to form crust on 
other side ; turn once more on each side to 
complete baking. Blackberry or raspberry 
griddle cakes in same manner. 

Rice Griddle Cakes. — 2 cups cold boiled 
rice, 1 pint flour, 1 teaspoon sugar, Mi teaspoon 
salt, lMi teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, 1 
egg, little more than Mi pint milk. Sift to- 
gether flour, sugar, salt, and powder ; add 
rice free from lumps, diluted with beaten egg 
and milk; mix into smooth batter. Have 
griddle well heated, bake nice brown, not too 
thick ; serve with maple syrup. 

Crushed Wheat Griddle Cakes.— 1 cup 

crushed wheat, lMi pints flour, 1 teaspoon 
brown sugar, Mi teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoons 
Royal Baking Powder, 1 egg, 1 pint milk. 
Boil 1 cup crushed wheat in % pint of water 
1 hour, then dilute with beaten egg and milk. 
Sift together flour, sugar, salt, and powder ; 
add to crushed wheat preparation when quite 
cold; mix into smooth batter. Bake on hot 
griddle ; brown delicately on both sides ; serve 
with hygienic cream sauce. 

Corn Meal Griddle Cakes.— 2 cups corn 
meal, 1 cup flour, Mi teaspoon salt, 1 tablespoon 
molasses, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, 
milk or milk and water to mix to thin batter. 
Bake as already directed. 

Indian Griddle Cakes. — % quart corn meal, 
Mi quart flour, 1 teaspoon brown sugar, Mi tea- 
spoon salt, 2 heaping teaspoons Royal Baking 
Powder, 2 eggs, 1 pint milk. Sift together 
corn meal, flour, salt, sugar, and powder, add 
beaten eggs and milk, mix into a smooth bat- 
ter. Bake on very hot griddle to a nice brown. 
Serve with molasses or maple syrup. 

Royal Buckwheats.— This is the most de- 
licious of all the griddle cakes. It has been 
against buckwheat cakes when made from 
yeast or risen overnight that it was difficult 
to make them light and sweet, and that dis- 
agreeable effects followed their eating. It is 
found that by the use of the Royal Baking 
Powder to raise the batter these objections 
have been entirely overcome, and that buck- 
wheat cakes are made a most delicious food, 
light, sweet, tender, and perfectly wholesome, 
that can be eaten by any one without the 
slightest digestive inconvenience. 2 cups 
pure buckwheat (do not use the so-called " pre- 
pared" or " self-raising" flours), 1 cup wheat 



flour, 2 tablespoons Royal Baking Powder, 
Mi teaspoon salt, all sifted well together. 
Mix with sweet milk into thin batter, and bake 
at once on a hot griddle. 

Buckwheat Cakes. — To lMi pints pure 
buckwheat flour (never use prepared or self- 
raising flour) add Mt pint each wheat flour 
and Indian meal, 3 heaping teaspoons Royal 
Baking Powder, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 tablespoon 
brown sugar or molasses. Sift well together, 
in dry state, buckwheat, Indian meal, wheat 
flour, and baking powder, then add remainder ; 
when ready to bake add 1 pint water or suffi- 
cient to form smooth batter that will run in a 
stream (not too thin) from pitcher; make 
griddle hot and cakes as large as a saucer. 
When surface is covered with air-hples it is 
time to turn cakes over ; take off when suffi- 
ciently browned. 

Bread Cakes. — Mi pound bread, 1 pint flour, 
1 teaspoon brown sugar, Mi teaspoon salt, \Mi 
teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, 3 A pint milk, 
1 egg. Put bread, free from crust, to steep in 
warm water. When thoroughly soaked, wring 
dry in a towel ; dilute with beaten egg and 
milk. Sift together flour, sugar, salt, and 
powder, add to prepared bread, mix together 
into a smooth batter. Bake on well-heated 
griddle. Serve with sugar and cream. 

Wheat (or Flannel) Cakes.— lMi pints flour, 
1 tablespoon brown sugar, 1 teaspoon salt, 2 
heaping teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, 2 
eggs, lMi pints milk. Sift together flour, 
sugar, salt, and powder ; add beaten eggs and 
muk, mix into smooth batter that will run 
in rather continuous stream from pitcher. 
Bake on good hot griddle rich brown color, in 
cakes large as tea saucers. Serve with maple 
syrup. 

Hominy Griddle Cakes. — Proceed as di- 
rected for rice griddle cakes ; serve with ma- 
ple syrup. 

Pancakes. — 1 pint flour, 6 eggs, 1 saltspoon 
salt, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, and 
milk to make a thin batter. Add the baking 
powder to the flour, beat the whites and yolks 
of eggs separately ; add the yolks, salt, 2 cups 
milk, then the whites and the flour alternately 
with milk, until the batter is of right consis- 
tency. Run 1 teaspoon lard over the bottom 
of a hot frying-pan, pour in a large ladleful of 
batter, and fry quickly. Roll pancake up like a 
sheet of paper, lay upon a hot dish, put in more 
lard, and fry another pancake. Keep hot over 
boiling water. Send Mi dozen to table at a 
time. Serve with sauce, jelly, or preserves. 

English Pancakes.— 1 pint milk, 2 eggs, 1 
tablespoon sugar, 1 cup flour, 1 teaspoon Royal 
Baking Powder, 1 cup cream, pinch salt. Sift 
flour, salt, and powder together ; add to it eggs 
beaten with sugar and diluted with milk and 
cream; mix into thin batter. Have small 
round frying-pan ; melt little butter in it ; pour 
about Mi cup batter in it, turn pan round, that 
batter may cover the pan, put on hot fire; 
turn it and brown other side. Butter each and 
roll it up ; sprinkle with powdered sugar. 

French Pancakes. — Proceed as directed for 
English pancakes ; when all are done, spread 
each with any kind of preserves, roll up, sift 
over plenty sugar, glaze with red-hot poker. 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



1 1 



Mi pound. 

1 pound. 

1 ounce. 

1 ounce. 
4 ounces. 
16 ounces. 



Cakes 

Flour 

FANCY-CAKE makers and confectioners 
prefer to use "pastry" flour for the 
making of cakes and pastry, which is a 
flour of different grade from that used for 
bread and general baking purposes. Bread 
flour contains a large proportion of gluten, the 
nitrogenous property of the wheat grain, which 
gives bone and muscle, and makes bread a 
nutritious food. When bread flour is used for 
cake and pie crust the result is not quite as 
flaky and light as it should be, because of the 
gluten in the flour. A special sack of pastry flour 
for use in making fine cakes and pastry will be 
advantageous. In appearance pastry flour is 
whiter than bread flour. When rubbed between 
the fingers it feels as soft and fine as corn- 
starch ; if squeezed in the hand it forms a firm 
ball. Because of this tendency to "pack "it 
should always be sifted very thoroughly. 

Generally speaking. Royal Baking Powder 
used with any good flour will make satisfactory 
cake which will be creditable to any house- 
keeper. 

Royal Baking Powder 

In no department of cookery is Royal Bak- 
ing Powder of greater use and importance than 
in making fine cake. Eggs are too expensive 
nowadays to be used as lavishly as they were 
a generation ago — ten or more to a cake. Not 
as a substitute wholly, but as an accessory, — 
as an aid toward producing the lightness and 
digestibility of the food. — we use the Royal 
Baking Powder. We thereby obtain uniformly 
good results and do a large amount of work at 
a minimum expense. The quantity called for 
by the receipt should be thoroughly mixed 
with the flour before the latter is sifted. 

The Royal Baking Powder has worked a 
revolution in cake-making. It is now no 
trouble to make at home the finest cakes in 
almost endless variety, which shall rival the 
productions of the confectioner. If you follow 
these directions there will be no spoiled or 
heavy cakes, no wasted materials through fail- 
ures in mixing or baking. 

To Mix Cakes Containing Butter 

Cream the butter, beating till light. Gradu- 
ally add the sugar, beating till light and 
creamy. Add the yolks of eggs beaten till 
light, then the flavoring. Beat in alternately 
the liquid and flour, the latter mixed with salt 
and baking powder. Lastly, add the beaten 
whites, and fruit, if used. 

To Mix Cakes Containing No Butter 

Beat the egg yolks until very light and thick. 
laa ♦!.„ „ j ii i. 2 ^-ii yolks, then, alternately, the milk and the flour 

Add the sugar gradually, beating till very £ ifted ^ the baking ' powder . Lastly , add 

light and spongy. Add the flavoring and the whites whipped to a stiff frot" 

liquid, if used. Have the whites of eggs almonds. Bake in a loaf in a mode] 

THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE 



whipped to a stiff froth. Add them alternately 
with the sifted flour (mixed with baking pow- 
der), and cut both in very lightly and quickly. 

To Bake Cakes 

Thin cakes need a hotter oven than loaf 
cakes. Cakes without butter (sponge cakes) 
should have a more moderate, longer baking 
than cakes of same size containing butter. 
The process of baking may be divided into 
four periods or quarters of time : in first quar- 
ter the cake begins to rise ; in second quarter 
it is still rising and begins to color ; in third 
quarter it browns all over ; in last quarter it 
shrinks from sides of pan. 

To test, insert a clean broom-straw into the 
middle of the cake ; if it comes out clean, the 
cake is done. Hold the pan to the ear; it 
should scarcely " sing." 

Line loaf -cake pans with buttered paper ; 
fruit cakes need several thicknesses of the 
same. 

Do not use sour milk, buttermilk, or any of 
the so-called prepared or self-raising flours. 

Weights and Measures 

1 cup, medium size . . Mi pint or "4 pound. 
4 cups, medium size, of flour weigh 1 pound. 
1 pint flour weighs 

1 pint white sugar weighs . 

2 tablespoons of liquid weigh 
8 teaspoons of liquid weigh 
1 gill of liquid weighs . 
1 pint of liquid weighs 

Adelaide Cake. — 1 cup butter, IV2 cups su- 
gar, 4 eggs, 1 pint flour, 1 teaspoon Royal Bak- 
ing Powder, 1 cup dried, stoned cherries, Mi 
cup cream, 1 teaspoon extract vanilla. Rub 
butter and sugar to white, light cream ; add 
eggs, 2 at a time, beating 5 minutes after each 
addition. Sift flour and powder together, 
add to butter, etc., with cherries, cream, and 
extract vanilla. Mix smoothly and gently into 
rather firm batter. Bake in paper-lined cake- 
tin (fig. IX) 40 minutes in moderate, steady 
oven. Watch carefully ; if getting too brown, 
protect with paper. 

Almond Cake. — Mi cup butter, 2 cups sugar, 
4 eggs, V*. cup almonds blanched — by pouring 
water on them until skins easily slip off — and 
cut in fine shreds, Mi teaspoon extract bitter 
almonds, 1 pint flour, IMt teaspoons Royal 
Baking Powder, 1 glass brandy, Mi cup milk. 
Rub butter and sugar to smooth white cream ; 
add eggs, 1 at a time, beating 3 or 4 minutes 
after each. Sift flour and powder together, 
add to butter, etc., with almonds, extract of 
bitter almonds, brandy, and milk ; mix into 
smooth, medium batter, bake carefully in 
rather hot oven 20 minutes in a fluted mold 
(fig. I). 

Almond Cake, 2. — 34 cup butter, 1 cup su- 
gar. Mi cup milk, 3 eggs, 2 cups flour, 2 level tea- 
spoons Royal Baking Powder, 1 pound almonds 
blanched and cut in strips. Cream the butter, 
add the sugar, and cream again ; add the beaten 



12 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



Angel Food Cake. — Whites 11 eggs, IMi cups 
fine granulated sugar, 1 cup flour sifted four 
times with 1 teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, 

1 teaspoon vanilla. Whip the whites to a firm, 
stiff froth. Cut in lightly the sugar, then the 
flour mixed with the baking powder, lastly 
the vanilla. Pour into an ungreased pan (fig. 
IV) and bake 40 minutes in moderate oven. 
When baked invert pan on 2 cups ; let stand 
till cold. 

Apple Jelly Cake. — 1 cup butter, 2 cups su- 
gar, 4 eggs, 3 cups flour, IV2 teaspoons Royal 
Baking Powder, 1 cup milk, 6 apples, 6 ounces 
sugar, 1 teaspoon butter. Rub together butter 
and sugar to fine, light, white cream, add eggs 

2 at a time, beating 10 minutes after each ad- 
dition. Sift flour and Royal Baking Powder 
together, add to butter, etc., with milk, and 
mix into rather thin batter. Bake in jelly- 
cake tins carefully greased. Meanwhile have 
apples peeled and sliced, put on fire with su- 
gar ; when tender remove, rub through fine 
sieve, and add butter. When cold use to spread 
between layers. Cover cake plentifully with 
sugar sifted over top. 

Bride's Cake. — 1 scant cup butter, 3 cups 
sugar, 1 cup milk, whites 12 eggs, 3 teaspoons 
Royal Baking Powder, 1 cup corn-starch, 3 
cups flour, V4 teaspoon salt. Cream butter and 
sugar. Mix flour, baking powder, and corn- 
starch, and add alternately with milk and 
whipped whites. Flavor with vanilla or aim ond 
extract and bake in loaf -tin lined with 4 thick- 
nesses of paper ; have oven moderate. 

Banana Cake. — V-i cup butter, 1 cup sugar, 
Mi cup milk, 2 scant cups flour, 1^ teaspoons 
Royal Baking Powder, whites 4 eggs, Mi tea- 
spoon vanilla. Mix flour and baking powder. 
Cream butter and sugar, add milk and flour 
alternately, then vanilla and beaten whites. 
Bake in 3 layer-tins in hot oven. To receipt 
for boiled icing (see Cake Fillings) add Mi cup 
mashed banana and use as filling. Dust top 
with powdered sugar. 

Chocolate Cake. — Make a cake as for ba- 
nana cake, and bake in 3 layers. Put together 
with chocolate filling (see Cake Fillings). 

Chocolate Cream Cake. — lMt pounds each 
butter, sugar, and flour, 14 eggs. Beat the yolks 
separate with sugar and butter. Beat the 
whites separately, and add to above. To Mi of 
the dough mix V4 pound chocolate, and bake of 
each part (the dark and light) 6 cakes. For 
filling take 3 4 pint cream, yolks 8 eggs. Sugar 
to taste ; flavor with extract vanilla, put on 
fire and stir until it thickens, then put 
between the cakes. 



Chocolate Layer Cake.— 2 eggs, 2 cups 
powdered sugar, 1 cup milk, 2 cups flour, 2 
scant teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, V4 tea- 
spoon salt, 1 teaspoon vanilla. Mix flour, salt, 
and baking powder. Beat egg yolks till thick. 
Gradually add and beat in the sugar. Add 
vanilla and milk, whites whipped stiff, and 
flour. Bake in 3 layer-cake pans in hot oven. 
Put together with chocolate filling, No. 2 (see 
Cake Fillings). 

Chocolate Loaf Cake. — Mi cup butter, lMt 
cups sugar, 2 cups flour, 2 teaspoons Royal 
Baking Powder, V4 teaspoon salt, Mi cup mUk, 

THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER 



4 eggs, 4 ounces chocolate dissolved in 5 table- 
spoons boiling water, 1 teaspoon vanilla. Mix 
flour, salt, and baking powder. Cream butter 
and sugar, add egg yolks, vanilla, and dissolved 
chocolate. Alternate* the milk and flour and 
beat hard, then add whipped whites, turn into 
buttered ioaf-pan lined with 3 thicknesses of 
paper. Bake in moderate oven. 

Cinnamon Chocolate Cake. — Mi cup but- 
ter, 1 cup sugar, 2 eggs, Mi cup milk, lMt cups 
flour, IV2 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, V* 
teaspoon salt, 3 teaspoons powdered cinnamon- 
Mix flour, salt, and baking powder. Cream 
butter and sugar. Add cinnamon and beaten 
yolks, then alternate milk and flour. Add 
whipped whites, beat hard, and bake in 3 layer- 
pans in quick oven. When cold put together 
with boiled icing containing melted chocolate. 

Centennial Cake. — % pound butter, IM2 
pounds brown sugar, 6 eggs, 2 cups milk, 1 3 4 
pounds flour, V3 teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoons 
Royal Baking Powder, % pound cleaned cur- 
rants, V4 pound seeded raisins, V4 pound sliced 
citron, 1 grated nutmeg, 1 glass wine. Dredge 
fruit well with a little of the flour. Mix flour, 
salt, and baking powder. Cream butter and 
sugar. Add beaten yolks, nutmeg, and wine. 
Beat in alternately the milk and flour, add 
whipped whites, and beat hard. Stir in pre- 
pared fruit. Line 2 loaf -pans with 3 thick- 
nesses of paper. Divide the batter between 
the pans and bake about IV4 hours in moderate 
oven. 

Cocoanut Layer Cake. — Mi cup butter, IV4 
cups sugar, whites 8 eggs, 2Mi cups flour, V4 
teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, 

1 teaspoon vanilla. Mix flour, salt, and baking 
powder. Cream butter and sugar. Add vanilla, 
then , alternately, the flour and whipped whites. 
Beat hard ; bake in 3 layer-cake pans. When 
cold put together with cocoanut filling, No. 2 
(see Fillings). 

Cocoanut Loaf Cake. — Mi cup butter, 1 cup 
sugar, 5 eggs, 2 cups flour, 1 cup milk, 2 tea- 
spoons Royal Baking Powder, V4 teaspoon salt, 

2 cups freshly grated cocoanut. Put together 
same as chocolate loaf cake, and bake in loaf- 
pan in moderate oven. 

Citron Cake.— \Mt cups butter, 2 cups sugar, 
6 eggs, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, 1 
pint flour, 1 cup citron cut in thin, large slices, 
1 teaspoon extract nutmeg. Rub the butter 
and sugar to a smooth, light cream, add the 
eggs, 2 at a time, beating 5 minutes after 
each addition. Sift the flour and powder to- 
gether, which add to the butter, etc., with the 
citron and extract nutmeg. Mix into a firm 
batter, and bake carefully in paper-lined shal- 
low, flat cake-pan (fig. XIII), in a moderate 
oven, 50 minutes. 

Coffee Cake. — 1 cup very strong coffee, 1 
cup butter, 2 cups sugar, 3 eggs, IMi pints 
flour, IMi teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, 1 
cup stoned raisins, cut in two, Mi cup chopped 
citron, 10 drops each extract allspice and nut- 
meg, and Mi cup milk. Rub the butter and 
sugar to a white cream ; add the eggs, 1 at 
a time, beating 3 or 4 minutes after each. 
Sift together flour and powder, which add to 
the butter, etc., with the coffee, raisins, citron, 
milk, and extracts. Mix into a smooth batter. 



IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



13 



Bake in paper-lined cake-tin (fig. IX), in a hot 
oven, 50 minutes. 

Coffee Cake, No. 2. — 1 cup brown sugar, 
1 cup butter, 2 eggs, Mi cup molasses, 1 cup 
strong coffee, V& teaspoon soda dissolved in 
the molasses. 2 teaspoons powdered cinnamon, 
1 teaspoon cloves, V4 teaspoon salt, 1 cup 
chopped raisins, 5 cups flour, 2 teaspoons 
Royal Baking Powder. Sift together the flour, 
salt, baking powder,and spices. Dredge raisins 
with some of the flour. Cream butter and 
sugar. Add beaten yolks and molasses, then 
alternate the coffee and flour; lastly beat in 
whipped whites. Divide into 2 loaves and 
bake in moderate oven. 

Cream Cakes (Eclaires a la Creme). — 10 

eggs, Mi cup butter, 3 4 pound flour, 1 pint water. 
Set the water on the fire in a stewpan with the 
butter; as soon as it boils, stir in the sifted 
flour with a wooden spoon ; stir vigorously 
until it leaves the bottom and sides of pan ; 
remove from fire, beat in the eggs, 1 at a time. 
Place this batter in a pointed canvas bag 
having a nozzle at small end, press out the 
batter, in shape of fingers, on a greased tin, a 
little distance apart. Bake in steady oven 
20 minutes. When cold, cut the sides and fill 
with following : 

PASTRY CREAM 

2 cups sugar, ltyj pints milk, 3 large table- 
spoons corn-starch, yolks of 5 eggs, 1 table- 
spoon good butter, 2 teaspoons extract vanilla. 
Bring the milk to a boil ; with the sugar add 
the starch dissolved in a little cold water ; as 
soon as it reboils, take from the fire. Beat in 
the egg yolks. Return to the fire 2 minutes 
to set the eggs. Add the extract and butter. 
Spread tops, when cold, with chocolate or va- 
nilla icing. 

Cream Cake. — 3 4 cup butter, 2 cups sugar, 
IMi pints flour, 5 eggs, 1 teaspoon Royal 
Baking Powder, 1 cup milk. Rub the butter 
and sugar to a white, light cream. Add the 
eggs, 2 at a time, beating 5 minutes after 
each addition. Sift the flour with the powder, 
which add to the butter, etc., and the milk. 
Mix into rather thin batter, and bake in jelly- 
cake tins, well greased, in hot oven 15 minutes. 
When cold spread pastry cream between the 
layers, and ice the top with clear icing. (See 
pastry cream, above.) 

Continental Fruit Cake.— 1 pound butter, 
1 pound sugar, 1% pounds flour, 1 cup cream, 
1 wine-glass each brandy and wine, 1 grated 
nutmeg, 1 teaspoon each mace and cloves, 2 
teaspoons cinnamon, *4 teaspoon salt, 8 eggs, 
\ pound each raisins and currants, Mi pound 
shred citron. Put together as for centennial 
cake, and bake in 2 loaves in moderate oven, 
lining pans with 3 thicknesses of paper. 

Cup Cake. — 1 cup butter, 2 cups sugar, 4 
eggs, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, 3 cups 
flour, 20 drops extract bitter almonds. Rub 
the butter and sugar to a cream. Add the 
eggs, 2 at a time, beating 5 minutes after 
each addition. Sift together the flour and 
powder, which add to the butter, etc., with the 
extract. Mix into a smooth, medium batter. 
Bake in well-greased cups or muffin-pans (fig. 
VII), in a rather hot oven, 20 minutes. 



Currant Cake. — 1 cup butter, 1 cup sugar, 
4 eggs, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, 1 
pint flour, lMt cups currants, washed and 
picked, 2 teaspoons extract cinnamon, and 

1 teaspoon extract lemon. Rub the butter 
and sugar to a white, light cream. Add the 
eggs, 1 at a time, beating a few minutes 
after each. Add the flour sifted with the 
powder, the currants, and the extracts. Mix 
into a medium batter. Bake in paper-lined 
cake-tin (fig. IX) 50 minutes, in a moderate 
oven. 

Currant Cake, No 2.— ^ cup butter, 1 cup 
sugar, 3 eggs, Mi cup milk, 2 cups flour, V4 tea- 
spoon salt, IMj teaspoons Royal Baking Pow- 
der, 1 cup cleaned currants, 1 teaspoon vanilla. 
Mix flour, salt, and baking powder, dredge the 
currants. Cream butter and sugar. Add 
beaten yolks and vanilla. Beat in flour and 
milk; add whipped whites and currants, and 
beat hard. Bake in shallow pan in moderately 
hot oven. 

Currant Cake (English).— IMi cups butter, 

2 cups sugar, 7 eggs, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking 
Powder, Mi cup citron, in small thin slices, the 
rind of an orange, peeled very thin and cut 
in shreds, 2 cups currants, washed and picked, 
lMs pints flour, 1 teaspoon extract nutmeg. 
Rub the butter and sugar to a white, light 
cream. Add the eggs, 2 at a time, beating 5 
minutes after each addition. Sift the flour 
and powder together. Add it to the butter, 
etc., with the citron, orange peel, currants, 
and the extract. Bake in a thickly paper- 
lined tin (fig. XIII), 1 hour and 25 minutes, in 
a moderate oven. 

Duchesse Cake. — IM2 cups butter, 1 cup 
sugar, 6 eggs, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking 
Powder, 1 pint flour, ] teaspoon extract cin- 
namon. Rub the butter and sugar to a light 
cream. Add the eggs, 2 at a time, beating 10 
minutes after each addition. Sift together 
flour and powder, add to the butter, etc., with 
the extract. Mix into a medium thick batter, 
and bake in small, shallow, square pans (fig. 
XII), lined with thin white paper, in a steady 
oven 30 minutes. When they are taken from 
the oven, ice them. 

Soft Gingerbread. — Mi cup butter, 2 cups 
molasses, 1 cup sugar, 4 cups flour, 1 cup milk, 
4 eggs, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, gin- 
ger and cloves to taste. 

Dark Fruit Cake. — 2 cups butter, 2 cups 
sugar, 12 eggs, 4 cups flour, 1 teaspoon Royal 
Baking Powder, Mi teaspoon salt, 1 pound cur- 
rants, 1 pound sliced citron, 3 pounds seeded 
raisins, 1 pound chopped figs, Mi cup any kind 
of wine, 2 tablespoons strained lemon juice, 2 
teaspoons cinnamon, Mi teaspoon each cloves 
and mace, 3 4 teaspoon each allspice and nut- 
meg. Sift together flour, salt, baking powder, 
and spices. Dredge fruit thoroughly. Cream 
butter and sugar, add beaten yolks and lemon 
juice. Alternate flour and wine, add whipped 
whites, and beat for 10 minutes. Stir in pre- 
pared fruit. Line loaf -pans with 4 thicknesses 
paper ; pour in batter. Bake in slow oven from 

3 to 5 hours, covering pans with paper until % 
baked. 

Delicate Fruit Cake. — % cup butter, 2 cups 
sugar, 1 cup milk, 2Mt cupsflour, "4 teaspoon salt, 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



14 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



2 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, whites 5 
eggs, 1 tablespoon grated lemon rind. Cream 
butter and mix dry ingredients. Cream butter 
and sugar. Add whipped whites, flour, and 
milk, and beat hard. To 5 tablespoons of this 
batter add spices to taste, and 1 cup raisins 
and Mi cup sliced citron, and bake in 1 layer. 
Bake remainder of batter in 2 layer-pans. 
When cold put together with boiled icing, hav- 
ing dark layer in center. 

Fig Cake. — 1M> cups sugar, Mi cup butter, % 
cup sweet milk, lMi cups flour, Ma teaspoon salt, 1 
teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, Mi cup corn- 
starch, whites 6 eggs. Put together as for corn- 
starch cake, and bake in 2 shallow oblong pans 
in a quick oven. Put together with fig filling 
(see Cake Fillings). 

French Cake. — \Mi cups butter, 2 cups sugar, 
12 eggs, 1 quart flour, Mi teaspoon Royal Bak- 
ing Powder, 1 gill each of cream, wine, and 
brandy, 20 drops each extract bitter almonds 
and nutmeg, lMi cups raisins, stoned, Mi cup 
almonds, blanched, 1 cup chopped citron. Rub 
butter and sugar to a white, light cream ; add 
the eggs, 2 at a time, beating 10 minutes be- 
tween the first 3 additions, and 5 minutes 
between the rest; add the flour, sifted with 
the powder, raisins, almonds, citron, extracts, 
cream, wine, and brandy. Mix into a smooth, 
consistent batter; bake in a thickly paper- 
lined cake-pan (fig. XIII), in a steady oven, 2 
hours. 

Light Fruit Cake. — Mi cup butter, 1 cup 
sugar, Mi cup milk, 2 cups flour, lMi teaspoons 
Royal Baking Powder, whites 4 eggs, Mi cup 
seeded raisins, Mi cup sliced citron, Mj cup 
chopped blanched almonds, V4 teaspoon salt. 
Mix flour, baking powder, and salt. Dredge 
fruit with flour. Cream butter and sugar, 
add beaten whites, and beat hard; add flour 
and milk and beat again ; stir in the prepared 
fruit. Line a loaf-pan with 3 thicknesses of 
paper, and bake cake lMi hours in moderate 
oven, covering with paper for first hour. 

Geranium Cake. — Mi cup butter, 1 cup sugar, 
% cup water, V4 teaspoon salt, 2 cups flour, 1 
teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, whites 4 eggs. 
Mix flour, salt, and baking powder. Cream but- 
ter and sugar. Add alternately the water and 
flour, then whites of eggs, and whip hard for 5 
minutes. Line loaf -pan with buttered paper, 
then with rose-geranium leaves. Bake in a 
moderate oven. The leaves can be pulled off 
with the paper. 

* Ginger Cake. — 34 cup butter, 2 cups sugar, 
4 eggs, lMi teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, 
IMj pints flour, 1 cup milk, 1 tablespoon extract 
ginger. Rub the butter and sugar to a light 
cream ; add the eggs, 2 at a time, beating 5 
minutes between ; add the flour, sifted with 
the powder, the milk and extract ; mix into a 
smooth batter ; bake in a cake-tin (fig. IX), in 
rather hot oven, 40 minutes. 

Ginger Sponge Cake. — 2 cups brown sugar, 
4 eggs, 1 pint flour, % cup water, lMi teaspoons 
Royal Baking Powder, 1 tablespoon extract 
ginger, 1 teaspoon extract lemon. Beat the 
eggs and sugar together for 10 minutes ; add 
the water, the flour sifted with the powder, 
and the extracts ; mix into a smooth sponge, 
and bake in quick oven 30 minutes. 



Gingerbread. — 1 cup brown sugar and 3 
tablespoons butter, stirred to a cream ; add 1 
cup New Orleans molasses, 2 eggs ; mix well ; 
stir dry 2 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder in 
2 Mi cups flour, put in ginger or spice to taste, 
bake in 1 loaf 1 hour. 

Gold Cake. — % cup butter, 2 cups sugar, 
yolks 10 eggs, lMi pints flour, 2 teaspoons 
Royal Baking Powder, 1 cup thin cream, 1 tea- 
spoon each extract lemon and nutmeg. Rub 
the butter and sugar to a white cream ; add 
the yolks, 3 at a time, beating a little after 
each addition ; add the flour sifted with the 
powder, the thin cream, and the extracts ; mix 
into a pretty firm batter; bake in a paper- 
lined cake-tin (fig. IX), in a steady oven, 50 
minutes. 

Gold Cake, No. 1.—M1 cup butter, 1 cup su- 
gar, yolks 6 eggs, 2 cups flour, M\ teaspoon 
salt, 1 heaping teaspoon Royal Baking Pow- 
der, grated rind and strained juice 1 large 
orange. Mix the dry ingredients. Cream the 
butter and sugar, add well-beaten yolks, or- 
ange rind and juice, and flour. Bake in shal- 
low pan in moderate oven, and ice with 
orange-water icing. 

Harrison Cake. — lMi cups sugar, lMi cups 
butter, 1 cup thick molasses mixed with Va tea- 
spoon soda, Mi cup milk, 1 teaspoon each cinna- 
mon and cloves, 5 eggs, 2 cups stoned raisins, 
5 cups flour, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking Pow- 
der. Mix flour, spices, and baking powder. 
Cream butter and sugar. Add molasses, then 
beat in Mi of flour. Add milk and beaten yolks, 
add remainder of flour, then egg whites 
whipped stiff. Beat hard, and bake in a loaf- 
pan in moderate oven about lMi hours. 

Hazelnut Cake. — 9 ounces flour, 4 ounces 
butter, 4 ounces sugar, 4 ounces chopped hazel- 
nuts, 4 eggs, 1 teaspoon vanilla, V4 teaspoon 
salt, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking Powder. Mix 
flour, salt, and baking powder. Cream butter 
and sugar, add vanilla, chopped nuts, and 
beaten yolks. Add flour, then whipped whites, 
and beat well. Bake in shallow pan in me- 
dium oven, and when cold ice with boiled icing. 

Honey Cake. — Mi cup butter, 1 cup sugar, 
1 cup honey, 1 pint flour, 1 teaspoon Royal 
Baking Powder, 2 eggs, 1 teaspoon caraway 
seeds. Mix the honey with the sugar ; add the 
butter melted, the eggs slightly beaten, the 
flour, sifted with the powder, and the seeds ; 
mix into a smooth batter of the consistency of 
sponge cake, and bake in a fairly hot oven 35 
minutes. 

Ice-Cream Cake. — 1 cup butter, 2 cups 
sugar, 1 cup milk, 3Mi cups flour, 2 teaspoons 
Royal Baking Powder, whites 8 eggs, V4 tea- 
spoon salt. Mix dry ingredients. Cream but- 
ter and sugar, add milk, then flour, and beat. 
Add whipped whites and beat again. Flavor 
with almond extract. Bake in three jelly-tins 
in hot oven, and when cold put together with 
boiled icing flavored with almond extract. 

Imperial Cake.— 1 cup butter, 1 cup sugar, 
5 eggs, 1 teaspoon grated lemon rind, 1 table- 
spoon lemon juice, Mi pound seeded raisins, Ms 
cup sliced blanched almonds, Mi pound flour, 
V4 teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking 
Powder. Mix dry ingredients. Cream butter 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



15 



and sugar. Add 1 whole egg and beat hard 
until incorporated. Stir in some of the flour. 
Alternate eggs and flour in same way until all 
the eggs are added, then beat hard 10 minutes. 
Add lemon juice, almonds, and dredged rai- 
sins. Line loaf-pan with 3 thicknesses paper. 
Bake in moderate oven about lVi hours. 



Jelly Cake. — Beat 3 eggs well, whites and 
yolks separately; take a cup of fine white 
sugar and beat in well with yolks, and 1 cup 
sifted flour, stirred in gently ; then stir in the 
whites, a little at a time, 1 teaspoon Royal Bak- 
ing Powder, and 1 tablespoon milk ; pour 
into 3 jelly-cake plates and bake from 5 to 10 
minutes in a well-heated oven; when cold 
spread with currant jelly, place each layer on 
top of the other, and sift powdered sugar on 
top. 

Rolled Jelly Cake. — 4 eggs, % cup powdered 
sugar, % cup pastry flour, Xk teaspoon salt, Vis 
teaspoon Royal Baking Powder. Beat egg 
yolks and sugar till light. Add mixed dry in- 
gredients; then stiffly beaten whites. Mix 
lightly together. Bake in thin sheet in quick 
oven. As soon as done turn quickly on a 
towel wrung out of water, spread with jelly, 
roll up, and dust with powdered sugar. 

Lemon Cake. — 1 cup butter, 2 cups sugar, 
7 eggs, IVis pints flour, 1 teaspoon Royal Bak- 
ing Powder, 1 teaspoon extract lemon. Rub 
to a light cream the butter and sugar ; add the 
eggs, 2 at a time, beating 5 minutes after 
each addition ; add the flour, sifted with the 
powder, and the extract ; mix into a medium 
batter; bake in paper-lined tin (fig. XIII), in a 
moderate oven, 40 minutes. 

Lady Cake. — IVis cups butter, 3 cups sugar, 
whites 8 eggs, 1 pint flour, Vis teaspoon Royal 
Baking Powder, 1 cup milk, 20 drops extract 
bitter almonds. Rub the butter and sugar to 
a cream ; add the flour sifted with the powder, 
milk, and extract ; mix into a smooth batter ; 
then gently mix the 8 egg whites, whipped to a 
dry froth ; when thoroughly mixed, put into a 
shallow cake-pan (fig. XIII), papered, and 
bake carefully in steady oven 40 minutes. 
When cool, ice the bottom and sides with 
white icing. 

Lightning Cake. — 1 cup butter, 1 cup gran- 
ulated sugar, 3 eggs, 2 cups flour, Vis teaspoon 
Royal Baking Powder, grated rind 1 lemon. 
Mix flour and baking powder. Cream butter 
and sugar, add lemon and beaten eggs, add 
flour, and beat well. Spread 1 inch thick on 
flat buttered pans, sprinkle with a mixture of 
granulated sugar, powdered cinnamon, and few 
chopped almonds. Bake pale brown in hot 
oven, and when cold cut in squares. 

Lunch Cake (Boston). — 2 cups butter, 2 
cups sugar, IVis pints flour, 1 teaspoon Royal 
Baking Powder, 6 eggs, 1 gill wine, 1 teaspoon 
each extract rose, cinnamon, and nutmeg. 
Rub the butter and sugar to a very light cream ; 
add the eggs, 2 at a time, beating 5 minutes 
after each addition ; add the flour sifted with 
the powder, wine, extracts ; mix into a smooth 
batter, put into a thickly papered shallow 
cake-pan (fig. XIII), and bake in moderate oven 
1*4 hours. When cold, ice the bottom and 
sides with white icing. 

Marshmallow Cake. — 1 egg, IVis cups sugar, 
1 tablespoon butter, 1 cup milk, 2 cups flour, 

THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER 



V4 teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking 
Powder. Mix flour, salt, and baking powder. 
Cream butter, add Vi of sugar, and beat. Add 
beaten egg and remainder of sugar, and beat 4 
minutes. Add alternately flour and milk, 
beating well. Add vanilla and bake in layer- 
cake pans in quick oven. Cut fine Vi pound 
marshmallows. Spread them between cake 
layers, and stand in open oven till they melt. 



Marbled Cake. — This is made in separate 
batters, a dark and a light one. For the dark 
one, take Vis cup butter, 1 cup brown sugar, 
2V<s cups flour, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking Pow- 
der, yolks of 4 eggs, Ms cup milk, 1 teaspoon 
each extract cinnamon, cloves, and allspice. 
For the light one take Ms cup butter, 1 cup 
sugar, 2Ms cups flour, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking 
Powder, whites of 4 eggs, Ms cup milk, 1 tea- 
spoon extract lemon. Both batters are made 
by rubbing the butter and sugar to a cream, 
adding the eggs, beating a few minutes, then 
adding the flour, sifted with the powder, the 
extracts and milk, and mixing into smooth bat- 
ter, rather firm. Have a paper-lined tin (fig. 
IX) ; with a spoon drop the two batters alter- 
nately into it, and bake in a rather quick oven 
35 minutes. 

Minnehaha Cake.— Vis cup butter, lMs cups 
sugar, 3 eggs, 1 cup milk, 2 Ms cups flour, 2 tea- 
spoons Royal Baking Powder, 1 teaspoon va- 
nilla. Mix dry ingredients. Cream butter and 
sugar, add beaten yolks and vanilla, then, al- 
ternately, the milk and flour. Beat well, and 
bake in 3 layers in quick oven. Put together 
with fruit filling (see Cake Fillings). 

Orange Cake. — Ms cup butter, 2 cups sugar, 
5 eggs, 1 pint flour, lMs teaspoons Royal Bak- 
ing Powder, 1 teaspoon extract orange, 1 cup 
milk. Rub the butter and sugar to a cream ; 
add the eggs, 2 at a time, beating 5 minutes 
after each addition ; add the flour sifted with 
the powder, the milk and extract ; mix in to 
a smooth, fine batter, put in a paper-lined cake- 
tin (fig. IX), and bake in a moderate oven 
30 minutes. When cool, cover the top with 
the following preparation: Whip the whites 
of 3 eggs to a dry froth ; then carefully mix in 
4 cups sugar, the juice, grated rind, and soft 
pulp, free of white pith and seeds, of 2 sour 
oranges. 

Nut Cake. — Ms cup butter, lMs cups sugar, 3 
eggs, 2 Vis cups flour, lMs teaspoons Royal Bak- 
ing Powder, M> cup milk, 1 cup of any meats 
of nuts preferred or at hand. Rub the butter 
and sugar to a light, white cream ; add the 
eggs, beaten a little, then the flour, sifted with 
the powder ; mix with the milk and nuts into 
a rather firm batter, and bake in a paper-lined 
tin (fig. IX), in a steady oven, 35 minutes. 

Peach-Blossom Cake. — 1 cup pulverized 
sugar, Vis cup butter, stirred together until 
like thick cream, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking 
Powder, Ms cup sweet milk; beat the whites 
of 3 eggs, and add to a cup of flour, mixed 
with the baking powder ; stir and add Ms 
teaspoon corn-starch. Flavor strongly with 
extract peach. Bake in 2 square sponge-tins 
in moderately quick oven, and when done 
sandwich with finely grated cocoanut and 
pink sugar. Frost with clear icing, and sprin- 
kle this with pulverized pink sugar. 

IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



II 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



Molasses Cake. — 1 cup butter, 1 cup brown 
sugar, Mi cup molasses, 1 cup milk, lMi pints 
flour, lMi teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, 
1 egg. Rub smootb the butter and sugar; 
add the milk, egg, and molasses ; stir in flour, 
sifted with the powder ; mix into a consis- 
tent batter, and bake in cake-tin (fig. IX) 40 
minutes. 

Pound Cake. — IM> cups butter, 2 cups sugar, 

7 eggs, lMi pints flour, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking 
Powder, 1 teaspoon extract nutmeg. Rub the 
butter and sugar to a white, light cream ; add 
3 of the eggs, 1 at a time, and the rest, two at 
a time, beating 5 minutes after each addi- 
tion ; add the flour, sifted with the powder ; 
add the extract ; mix into a smooth, medium 
batter, and bake in a paper-lined cake-tin (fig. 
XIII), in a steady oven, 50 minutes. 

Pond-Lily Cake. — 1 cup butter, lMi cups 
sugar, whites 5 eggs, 1% pints flour, lMi tea- 
spoons Royal Baking P«wder, 1 cup milk; 
flavor with extract peach aud a few drops ex- 
tract rose. Bake in 2 cakes, in very deep jelly- 
or sponge-tins, and when done put together 
with freshly grated cocoanut and pulverized 
sugar between and on top of the cakes, and ice 
with clear icing. 

Queen Cake. — 2 cups butter, 2Mi cups sugar, 
lMi pints flour, 8 eggs, Mi teaspoon Royal Bak- 
ing Powder, 1 wine-glass each wine, brandy, 
and cream, Mi teaspoon each extract nutmeg, 
rose, and lemon, 1 cup dried currants, washed 
and picked, 1 cup raisins, stoned and cut in 
two, 1 cup citron, cut in small, thin slices. 
Rub the butter and sugar to a very light cream ; 
add the eggs, 2 at a time, beating 5 minutes 
after each addition; add the flour, sifted 
with the powder, the raisins, currants, wine, 
brandy, cream, citron, and extracts ; mix into 
a batter, and bake carefully in a papered cake- 
tin (fig. XIII), in a moderately steady oven, 
l^ hours. 

Sponge Cake. — 2 cups sugar, 7 eggs, 1 cup 
flour, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, pinch 
salt, 1 teaspoon extract lemon. Whip sugar 
and eggs together until thick and white ; add 
flour, sifted with powder and salt, and the ex- 
tract ; mix together quickly ; bake in tin (fig. 
XII) lined with buttered paper, in hot oven, 
35 minutes. 

Sponge Cake (Almond). — \Mi cups sugar, 

8 eggs, lMi cups flour, Mi teaspoon Royal Bak- 
ing Powder, 1 teaspoon extract bitter almonds. 
Boil sugar in 1 Mi gills water until, taking some 
up on end of spoon-handle and cooling in wa- 
ter, it breaks brittle, when at once pour it on 
the eggs, previously whipped 10 minutes ; con- 
tinue the whipping 20 minutes longer; add 
flour, sifted with powder, and extract ; bake in 
well-buttered cake-mold (fig. I), in quick oven, 
30 minutes. 

Sponge Cake (Berwick). — 6 eggs, 3 cups 
sugar, 4 cups flour, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking 
Powder, 1 cup cold water, pinch salt, 1 tea 
spoon extract lemon. Beat eggs and sugar to- 
gether 5 minutes ; add flour, sifted with salt 
and powder, water, and extract ; bake in shal- 
low square cake-pan (fig. XIII), in quick, steady 
oven, 35 minutes ; when removed from oven, 
ice it with clear icing. 



Cream Sponge Cake.— 6 eggs, their weight 
in powdered sugar, and Mi their weight in flour, 
Mi teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, pinch salt, 
grated rind 1 orange. Beat egg yolks and 
sugar till thick. Sift in the mixed flour, salt, 
and baking powder. Mix lightly, add orange 
rind and stiffly whipped whites. Cut them in 
lightly, and bake in 2 shallow pans in mod- 
erate oven. Put together with cream filling 
flavored with orange. 

Silver Cake.— Whites 6 eggs, 1 cup milk, 2 
cups sugar, % cup butter, 4 cups flour, l k tea- 
spoon salt, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, 
1 teaspoon almond extract. Cream butter and 
sugar ; add alternately the milk and flour 
mixed with salt and baking powder ; then the 
extract and the stiffly whipped whites. Beat 
well, and bake in loaf -pan in moderate oven. 

Snow Cake. — 1 pound arrowroot, V4 pound 
sugar, 1 cup butter, whites 6 eggs, Mi teaspoon 
Royal Baking Powder, 1 teaspoon almond ex- 
tract. Cream butter and sugar. Add whipped 
whites and Mj teaspoon salt, then the arrow- 
root mixed with baking powder. Beat well 
for 10 minutes ; add extract, and bake in loaf- 
pan lined with 3 thicknesses paper. Have 
oven moderate, bake IV2 hours, and cover pan 
with paper for first hour. 

Spice Cake. — 1 cup butter, 1 cup brown 
sugar, 1 pint flour, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking 
Powder, 1 teaspoon each caraway and corian- 
der seeds, 1 teaspoon each extract nutmeg, 
cinnamon, and ginger, 1 cup milk. Sift flour, 
sugar, and powder together ; rub in butter ; 
add milk, seeds, and extracts ; mix smooth 
into batter of medium thickness ; fill greased 
patty-pans % full ; bake in hot oven 8 or 10 
minutes. 

Delicate Spice Cake. — % cup melted butter, 
% cup sugar, 2Mi cups flour, 1 egg, % cup molas- 
ses, 1 cup milk, 2 scant teaspoons Royal Baking 
Powder, 1 tablespoon vinegar, 1 tablespoon 
mixed ground spice, pinch salt. Beat egg, 
add milk. Add, mixed, flour, baking powder 
and salt, spice, sugar, melted butter, molasses, 
and vinegar. Pake in two shallow pans in 
quick oven. 

Scotch Cake. — lMi cups butter, 2Vi cups 
sugar, 8 eggs, lMi pints flour, Mi teaspoon 
Royal Baking Powder, 3 cups raisins, stoned, 
1 tablespoon extract lemon. Rub butter and 
sugar to light, white cream ; add eggs, 2 at a 
time, beating 5 minutes after each addition ; 
add flour sifted with powder, raisins, and ex- 
tract ; mix into smooth batter ; put into paper- 
lined square, shallow cake-pan (fig. XIII) ; 
bake in moderate oven 1 hour. 

Washington Cake (St. Louis, 1780).— 2 

cups butter, 3 cups sugar, 4 cups flour, 2 tea- 
spoons Royal Baking Powder, 5 eggs, 1 cup milk, 
1 cup stoned raisins, Mi cup washed and picked 
currants, V4 cup chopped citron, 1 teaspoon 
each extract nutmeg and cinnamon. Rub but- 
ter and sugar to light, white cream ; add beaten 
eggs gradually, the flour sifted with powder, 
milk, raisins, currants, citron, and extracts; 
mix into smooth, medium batter ; bake in shal- 
low square cake-pan (fig. XIII), in rather 
quick, steady oven, lMi hours ; when cold ice 
with white icing. 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



17 



Shrewsbury Cake. — 1 cup butter, 3 cups 
sugar, 1 Mi pints flour, 3 eggs, 1 teaspoon Royal 
Baking Powder, 1 cup milk, 1 teaspoon extract 
rose. Rub butter and sugar to smooth, white 
cream ; add eggs, 1 at a time, beating 5 min- 
utes after each ; add flour, sifted with pow- 
der, and extract ; mix into medium batter ; 
bake in cake-mold (fig. I), well and carefully 
greased, in quick oven, 40 minutes. 

Vanilla Cr.ke. — lMi cups butter, 2 cups 
sugar, 6 yolks eggs, 1 pint flour, lMi teaspoons 
Royal Baking Powder, 1 cup cream, 1 tea- 
spoon extract vanilla. Rub butter and sugar 
until very light and creamy ; add egg yolks and 
cream, flour, sifted with powder, and extract ; 
mix into smooth, rather firm batter ; bake in 
shallow square pan (fig. XIII), in fairly hot 
oven, 35 minutes. 

Wedding (or Bride) Cake. — 4 cups butter, 
4 cups sugar, 10 eggs, 4 pints flour, 6 cups 
currants, washed, dried, and picked, 3 cups 
sultana raisins, 3 cups citron, Mi cup can- 
died lemon peel, 2 cups almonds, blanched 
and cut in shreds, Mi pint brandy, 2 teaspoons 
each nutmeg, mace, and cinnamon, tablespoon 
each cloves and allspice. Prepare all these 
ingredients in following manner : place butter 
and sugar in large bowl ; break eggs into quart 
measure or pitcher; cover small waiter with 
clean sheet of paper ; on it lay sifted flour, fruit, 
citron and lemon peel cut into shreds, the 
almonds and spices, with brandy measured at 
hand ; also get ready large cake-tin (fie:. XVIII), 
by papering it inside with white paper and out- 
side and bottom with 4 or 5 thicknesses of coarse 
wrapping-paper, which can be tied on. Having 
thus prepared everything, and banked up fire 
to last, with addition from time to time of a 
shovel of coal, by which means you will not 
reduce oven heat, proceed to beat to very light 
cream the butter and sugar, adding eggs, 2 at 
a time, beating a little after each addition, 
until all are used ; then put in contents of waiter 
all at once, with brandy ; mix very thoroughly 
and smooth, put into prepared cake-tin, smooth 
over the top, put plenty of paper on to protect 
it; bake 8 hours, keeping oven steadily up to 
clear, moderate heat ; watch carefully and you 
will produce a cake worthy of the occasion ; re- 
move from oven very carefully, and suffer it to 
stay on tin until quite cold ; next day ice it with 
thin coat of white icing, both top and sides ; 
place in cool oven to dry the icing. Now spread 
a second coat of icing, which will prevent any 
crumbs or fruit being mixed up with the icing 
when you are icing to finish ; now with broad 
knife proceed, when first coat is dry, to ice sides, 
then pour icing on center of cake, in quantity 
sufficient to reach the edges, when stop; deco- 
rate with vase of white, made flowers, etc., to 
taste. 

White Mountain Cake. — 1 cup butter, 3 
cups sugar, 1 pint flour, lMi teaspoons Royal 
Baking Powder, whites 6 eggs, 1 cup milk, 20 
drops extract bitter almonds. Rub butter and 
sugar to light, white cream ; add the 6 whites 
whipped to dry froth, the flour sifted with the 
powder, the milk, and extract ; mix together 
thoroughly, but carefully, and bake in jelly- 
cake tins in a quick oven 15 minutes; then 
arrange in layers with white icing and grated 
cocoanut mixed, in the proportion of 2 cups 
of former to 1 of latter. 



Wild Rose Cake.— Make the dough after 
the receipt given for pond-lily cake, flavoring 
with rose and strawberry instead of peach. 
Bake in 2-inch-deep jelly-tins, and sandwich 
with pink icing, and the same on top. (Made 
by substituting finely pulverized pink sugar 
for white.) When you have put the last layer 
of pink icing on top, sift very lightly over 
with granulated white sugar. 

Webster Cake.— 1 cup butter, 3 cups 
sugar, 2 eggs, 5 cups flour, 1 teaspoon Royal 
Baking Powder, 2 cups raisins, seeded, 1 tea- 
spoon each extract bitter almonds and vanilla, 
1^2 cups milk. Rub butter, sugar, and eggs 
smooth ; add flour sifted with powder, raisins, 
milk, and extracts ; mix into medium batter ; 
bake in cake-mold (fig. I), in quick, steady 
oven, 45 minutes. 

Wedding Fruit Cake.— 1 pound flour, 1 
pound sugar, 1 pound butter, 2 pounds cur- 
rants, 1 pound raisins, Mi pound citron, 1 
ounce mace, 1 ounce cinnamon, 4 nutmegs, 1 
ounce cloves, 8 eggs, wine-glass brandy, Mi 
ounce extract rose. 

Wine Cake. — 1 cup butter, 2 cups sugar, 
2 cups flour, M> teaspoon Royal Baking Pow- 
der, 1 gill wine, 3 eggs. Rub butter and sugar 
to Light cream, add eggs, 1 at a time, beating 
5 minutes after each addition ; add flour sifted 
with powder, and wine ; mix into medium, firm 
batter; bake in shallow square cake-pan (fig. 
XIII), in moderate oven, 40 minutes; when 
taken from oven carefully ice with transpa- 
rent icing. 



Cookies and Small Cakes 

ROYAL COOKIES.— 1 cup butter, 2 cups 
sugar, 5 eggs, lMi pints flour, Mi teaspoon 
Royal Baking Powder, 1 cup milk. Mix 
butter, sugar, and eggs smooth; add flour 
sifted with powder, and milk ; mix into dough, 
soft enough to handle conveniently ; flour the 
board, roll out dough, thin; cut out with bis- 
cuit-cutter ; lay on greased baking-tin, bake in 
hot oven 5 or 6 minutes. 

Soft Cookies. — 1 cup butter, lMi cups 
sugar, 2 eggs, 3 tablespoons milk, 1 teaspoon 
Royal Baking Powder, just enough flour to roll 
out to a soft dough. Sprinkle with sugar be- 
fore rolling, cut in rounds, bake in quick 
oven. 

Cocoanut Cookies. — 1 cup butter, 2 cups 
sugar, 2 eggs, 1 cup grated cocoanut, 1 tea- 
spoon vanilla, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking Pow- 
der, flour to roll out. Bake pale brown. 

Plain Cookies. — Mi cup butter, lMi cups 
sugar, 2 beaten eggs, 1 cup water, 1 teaspoon 
grated nutmeg, 1 cup flour sifted with 1 tea- 
spoon Royal Baking Powder, sufficient flour 
added to make a soft dough. Roll out, cut into 
cookies, and bake pale brown in moderate oven. 

Anise=seed Cakes. — 8 eggs, 1 pound sugar, 
1 scant pound flour, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking 
Powder, pinch salt, 1 tablespoon anise-seed. 
Beat eggs and sugar together 30 minutes, then 
add anise, flour mixed with powder, and roll 
out thin. Cut in fancy shapes and bake on 
flat tins in quick oven. 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



18 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



Albert Cakes. — Yolks 6 eggs, white 1 egg, 

5 ounces sugar, 5 Ms ounces blanched and 
chopped almonds, 3 ounces flour, Vi teaspoon 
Royal Baking Powder, 1 ounce chopped can- 
died orange peel, Mi teaspoon extract cinnamon, 
pinch cloves, grated rind Mi lemon. Bake in 
small patty-pans in moderate oven. 

Buttercups. — 2 tablespoons butter, 1 cup 
sugar, yolks 9 eggs, 1 teaspoon vanilla, 34 cup 
milk, 3 cups flour, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking 
Powder. Bake in patty-pans, ice with boiled 
icing, tinted yellow. 

Jumbles. — 1 cup butter, 1 cup sugar, 4 
eggs, 2 cups flour, Mi teaspoou Royal Baking 
Powder. Rub together the butter and sugar ; 
add the beaten eggs, and flour sifted with the 
powder; flour the board, roll out the dough 
rather thin, cut with jumble-cutter, or any you 
may have; roll in sugar, lay out on greased 
tin (fig. XIII) ; bake in fairly hot oven 10 
minutes. 

Peanut Jumbles. — \Mi cups butter, 2 cups 
sugar, 6 eggs, lMi pints flour, Mt cup corn-starch, 

1 teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, 1 teaspoon 
extract lemon, Mi cup chopped peanuts, mixed 
with Mi cup granulated sugar. Rub the but- 
ter and sugar smooth ; add the beaten eggs, 
the flour, corn-starch, and powder, sifted to- 
gether, and the extract; flour the board, roll 
out the dough rather thin, cut out with bis- 
cuit-cutter, roll in the chopped peanuts and 
sugar, lay on greased baking-tin (fig. XIII) ; 
bake in rather hot oven 8 to 10 minutes. 

Little Spice Cakes. — 1 cup butter, 1 cup 
sugar, 5 eggs, 1 teaspoon vanilla, 1 tablespoon 
black coffee, x h teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoons 
cocoa, 1 teaspoon extract cinnamon, 1 teaspoon 
extract nutmeg, 2 ounces corn-starch, 1 cup 
flour, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking Powder. Mix 
as for cakes with butter, and bake in patty- 
pans in a hot oven. 

Little Chocolate Cakes. — 2 tablespoons 
butter, 1 cup sugar, Mi cup water, lMi cups 
flour, pinch salt, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking 
Powder, 2 eggs, 4 tablespoons grated chocolate 
melted over hot water, 1 teaspoon extract 
vanilla. Put together as for cake with butter ; 
bake in patty-pans in moderate oven. 

Scotch Cakes. — 1 pound flour, Mi pound 
butter, Mi teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, % 
cup granulated sugar, 1 teaspoon extract va- 
nilla. Mix flour and baking powder. Rub in 
butter as for biscuits. Work in the sugar and 
flavoring. This gives a rather crumbly dough. 
Work with hands to make it adhere, pat out 
in cakes, sprinkle with caraway-seed. Bake 
in moderate oven. Very rich. 

Spencer Cakes. — 2 cups sugar, 8 eggs, lMs 
pints flour, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, 

2 tablespoons coriander-seed, 1 teaspoon ex- 
tract lemon. Beat eggs and sugar together, 
until they get thick and white; add flour 
sifted with powder, the seed, and extract ; mix 
into rather thick sponge ; drop in spoonfuls on 
greased tin (fig. XIV), bake in hot oven 5 or 

6 minutes. 

Rice Cakes. — Mi cup butter, 2 cups sugar, 4 
eggs, 1M> cups rice flour, lMi cups flour, 1 tea- 
spoon Royal Baking Powder, Mi cup cream, 1 
teaspoon extract lemon. Beat the eggs and 



sugar together 10 minutes; add the butter, 
melted ; sift together flour, rice flour, and the 
powder, which add to the eggs, etc., with the 
cream and the extract ; mix into a thin batter, 
and bake in patty-pans, well greased, in a hot 
oven, 10 minutes. 

Delicious Little Cakes can be made by 
making a rich jumble-paste — rolling out in 
any desired shape ; cut some paste in thick, 
narrow strips and lay around your cakes so as 
to form a deep, cup-like edge ; place on a well- 
buttered tin and bake. When done, fill with 
iced fruit, prepared as follows : Take rich, ripe 
peaches (canned ones will do if fine and well 
drained from all juice), cut in halves; plums, 
strawberries, pineapples cut in squares or 
small triangles, or any other available fruit, 
and dip in the white of an egg that has been 
very slightly beaten, and then in pulverized 
sugar, and lay in the center of your cakes. 

Cinnamon Cakes. — Whites 4 eggs, Mi cup 
sugar, 1 cup flour, Mi teaspoon Royal Baking 
Powder, 2 tablespoons cream, 1 teaspoon ex- 
tract cinnamon. Mix as for cakes without 
butter, and bake in patty-pans in a quick oven. 
Ice with water icing flavored with cinnamon 
extract. 

Cigarettes. — Mix and sift 2 cups flour, 1 
teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, 2 tablespoons 
sugar, Mi teaspoon salt. Rub in 2 tablespoons 
butter, add Mi teaspoon extract cinnamon, 10 
drops extract cloves, and milk to mix to a 
rather firm dough. Knead till smooth, cut off 
bits size of hickory nuts and mold into shape 
of cigarettes. Take Mi cup granulated sugar 
and 1 teaspoon powdered cinnamon, mix, and 
roll each cigarette in it. Lay on greased pans, 
bake in moderate oven. 

Drop Cakes. — 1 cup butter, Mi cup sugar, 2 
eggs, 1 small teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, 
1 pint flour, 1 cup washed and picked currants, 
1 teaspoon each extract nutmeg and lemon, Mi 
cup milk. Rub the butter and sugar to a 
white, light cream ; add the eggs, beat 10 min- 
utes ; add the flour and powder sifted together, 
the milk and extracts. Mix into a rather firm 
batter, and drop with a spoon on a greased 
baking-tin (fig. XIV) ; bake in a quick oven 10 
minutes. 

Ginger Snaps.— Mi cup lard, Mi cup butter, 

1 large cup brown sugar, 1 cup water, 1 table- 
spoon extract ginger, 1 teaspoon each extract 
cinnamon and cloves, 1 quart flour, lMi tea- 
spoons Royal Baking Powder. Rub to a 
smooth paste the lard, butter, and sugar ; then 
rub it into the flour and powder sifted together. 
Mix into a firm dough with the water and ex- 
tracts. Roll out the dough thin on a floured 
board, cut out with a round biscuit-cutter, and 
bake on greased pan (fig. XIV), in a hot, steady 
oven, 8 minutes. 

Edenkobers. — 2 eggs, 1 cup sugar, V4 pound 
almonds, pounded to paste, Mi pound chopped 
citron, V4 pound chopped candied lemon peel, 

2 tablespoons drained honey, 2 cups flour, Mi 
teaspoon Royal Baking Powder. Mix to a 
paste, roll out, and cut in small cakes. Bake in 
moderate oven. 

Hermits. — 3 eggs, 1 cup butter, IV2 cups 
sugar, 1 cup chopped raisins, 2 tablespoons 
chopped citron, 1 teaspoon each extract cloves, 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



19 



allspice, and cinnamon, pinch of salt, 1 tea- 
spoon Royal Baking Powder, flour to roll out. 
Cut in rounds, bake in moderate oven. 

Soft Gingerbread.— 1 cup molasses, Mi cup 
sugar, Mi cup butter, Mi cup milk, 2 eggs, 1 
tablespoon ginger, 1 teaspoon allspice. 2 cups 
flour, IMi teaspoons Royal Baking Powder. 
Bake in shallow pans or gem-pans in moderate 
oven. 

Spice Drop Cakes.— Yolks 3 eggs, Mi cup 
butter, 1 cup molasses, Mi cup milk, 3 cups 
flour, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, pinch 
of salt, spice to taste. Drop on buttered paper 
on tins, and bake in hot oven. 

Sand Tarts. — 1 cup butter, IMi cups sugar, 
3 eggs, 1 tablespoon water, Mt teaspoon Royal 
Baking Powder, flour to roll out. Cut in 
squares, sprinkle with granulated sugar and 
powdered cinnamon before baking in hot oven. 

Walnut Wafers.— Mi pound brown sugar, 
M> pound broken walnut meats, 2 level table- 
spoons flour, Vi teaspoon Royal Baking Pow- 
der, Ms teaspoon salt, 2 eggs. Drop small 
spoonfuls on buttered pans, bake in quick 
oven. 



Fillings and Icings for 
Cake 

CREAM FILLING.— 2 cups sugar, 3 cups 
milk, 3 heaping tablespoons corn-starch, 
yolks 5 eggs, 1 tablespoon butter, 2 tea- 
spoons extract vanilla. Scald milk in double 
boiler, add corn-starch dissolved in little cold 
milk, stir till smooth. Add sugar, cook 10 min- 
utes. Add egg yolks, cook 4 minutes, take off 
and add vanilla. 

Cream Filling, 2.— 2 cups milk, 2 eggs, 3 
tablespoons sifted flour, 1 cup sugar, flavoring. 
Cook as above. 

Cream Filling, 3. — 1 cup thick cream 
whipped to a solid froth, Mi cup powdered 
sugar, 1 teaspoon extract vanilla. Mix lightly 
together and use at once. 

Cocoanut Filling. — 1 cup grated cocoanut, 

1 cup sugar, 1 cup milk, 2 eggs. Cook all to- 
gether 5 minutes. 

Cocoanut Filling, 2.— To cream filling, 2 
add 2 cups freshly grated cocoanut, and 2 
teaspoons extract vanilla. 

Chocolate Cream Filling. — Mt cake choco- 
late, grated, % cup milk, Mi cup sugar, 1 table- 
spoon butter, pinch salt, 1 teaspoon extract 
vanilla. Boil gently till thick. 

Chocolate Filling. — V4 cake chocolate, 
grated, Mt cup milk, yolk 1 egg, 1 cup sugar, 1 
teaspoon extract vanilla. Boil sugar, choco- 
late, and milk till thickened, add egg yolk, cook 

2 minutes, take from fire, add vanilla. 

Chocolate Filling, 2. — 5 tablespoons grated 
chocolate, cream to moisten, 1 cup sugar, 1 egg, 
1 teaspoon extract vanilla. Beat egg, add 
chocolate and sugar, cook over fire till thick, 
add flavoring. 



Lemon Filling.— Grated rind 2 lemons, their 
strained juice, 2 cups sugar, whites 2 eggs, 1 
cup boiling water, 2 tablespoons flour mixed 
with cold water, 1 tablespoon melted butter. 
Cook together in double boiler, adding beaten 
whites last. 

Orange Filling.— As lemon filling, using but 
Mi cup sugar and oranges instead of lemons. 

Fig Filling. — Mi pound chopped figs, 2 table- 
spoons sugar, 3 tablespoons boiling water, 1 
tablespoon lemon juice. Cook in double boiler 
till thick enough. 

Fruit Filling. — 4 tablespoons finely chopped 
citron, same of chopped seeded raisins, Mi cup 
chopped blanched almonds, V4 pound chopped 
figs, whipped whites 3 eggs, Mi cup sugar. 
Whip whites with sugar, add fruits, and beat 
well. 

Prune and Nut Filling.— Soak Mi pound 
large prunes over night. Steam until plump 
and soft. Remove pits. When cold add Mi 
cup chopped blanched almonds and stir into 
this whites 3 eggs, beaten stiff, with Mi cup 
powdered sugar. 

Almond Icing. — Whites 3 eggs, 1 pound 
Jordan (sweet) almonds, 3 cups sugar, 10 drops 
extract rose. Pound to fine paste almonds, 
with a little sugar ; then add whites of eggs, 
rest of sugar, and extract ; pound few minutes 
to thoroughly mix. Take up in bowl and use 
as directed. 

Clear Icing, for Cake.— Put 1 cup sugar 
in a bowl with a tablespoon lemon juice and 
whites of 2 eggs. Mix together smooth and 
pour over the cake ; if the cake is not hot 
enough to dry it, place it in the mouth of a 
moderately warm oven. 

Transparent Icing. — Place 1 pound pulver- 
ized white sugar in saucepan with Mi pint water. 
Boil to consistency of mucilage, then rub sugar 
with wooden spatula against sides of pan until 
it assumes white, milky appearance. Stir in 
2 tablespoons extract vanilla; mix well to- 
gether. Pour this while hot over top of cake 
so as to completely cover it. 

Chocolate Transparent Icing. — Melt 3 
ounces fine chocolate with small quantity water 
in pan over fire (stirring constantly) until it 
becomes soft. Dilute this with V2 gill of 
syrup ; work until perfectly smooth. Then 
add to boiled sugar as above. 

White Icing.— The whites of 4 eggs, IMi 
pounds white sugar dust, the juice of Mi 
lemon, V4 ounce extract rose. Place the whites 
and the sugar in a bowl with the juice and ex- 
tract. Beat with a wooden spoon until, letting 
some run from the spoon, it maintains the 
thread-like appearance for several minutes, 
when use as directed. 

Bakers' Soft Icing.— Boil 2 cups granulated 
sugar with 1 cup water without stirring till it 
ropes when dropped from fork. Take quickly 
from fire, let stand untouched till blood-warm. 
Beat till thick as soft dough, take in hands and 
knead till soft, smooth, and creamy. Pack in 
covered glass and keep in cold place. To use, 
put some in bowl, set in hot water, stir con- 
stantly till soft enough to spread. Flavor and 
use. Will keep indefinitely. 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



20 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



Boiled Icing.— Boil 1 cup granulated sugar 
with Mi cup water till it ropes when dropped 
from fork. Pour gradually over stiffly whipped 
whites of 2 eggs, beating hard. Add flavoring 
and use at once. 

Chocolate Water Icing.— Melt 3 ounces fine 
chocolate in a few spoons water until creamy. 
Boil 2 cups granulated sugar with 1 cup water 
without stirring till it can be rolled in soft ball 
between fingers in cold water. Take from fire, 
stir for a moment till it becomes slightly 
cloudy. Add chocolate and use at once on 
cake. 

Plain Icing. — Whip white 1 egg till frothy. 
Add 1 teaspoon cold water, then 1 tablespoon 
at a time, sufficient sifted confectioners' sugar 
to make stiff enough to spread. Flavor as 
desired. 

Royal Icing. — Put whites 2 eggs in a bowl, 
add 1 tablespoon sifted confectioners' sugar, 
beat 3 minutes. Add another tablespoon sugar, 
beat again, continue till icing is very stiff and 
glossy, adding 1 teaspoon lemon juice. Spread 
on cake, let stand till dry. 

Water Icing. — To 2 tablespoons boiling 
water add enough confectioners' sugar to make 
thick enough to spread. Add any flavoring 
desired. 

Maple Sugar Frosting. — Boil Mt pound 
broken maple sugar with 3 tablespoons water 
till dissolved and thick enough to rope when 
dropped from fork. Pour gradually on whipped 
whites of 2 eggs. Beat till thick enough to 
spread. 

Marshmallow Frosting. — Heat 2 table- 
spoons milk and 6 tablespoons sugar over fire ; 
boil 6 minutes without stirring. In double 
boiler heat Mi pound cutmarshmallows. When 
very soft add 2 tablespoons boiling water, 
cook till smooth. Beat in hot sugar; keep 
beating till partly cool, add Mi teaspoon extract 
vanilla. Use at once. 



Plain Cakes 

GERMAN APPLE CAKE.— 1 pint flour, 
lMt teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, % 
teaspoon salt, mixed and sifted. Rub 
in 2 tablespoons butter, add 1 beaten egg, and 
milk to make very thick batter. Spread 1 inch 
deep in greased shallow tin ; have ready sev- 
eral pared, cored, and quartered apples. Press 
points into dough, sprinkle thickly with sugar 
mixed with little cinnamon. Bake in hot oven. 

Dutch Peach Cake.— Make a soft biscuit- 
dough with 1 quart flour, 2 tablespoons but- 
ter, Mt teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking 
Powder, and sufficient cold milk to mix. Roll 
out % inch thick, lay on flat greased pans. 
Have ready some peaches pared and quartered. 
Press these into the top of the dough in rows. 
Sprinkle with granulated sugar and bake in a 
quick oven. Cut in squares while hot. 

Coffee Cake. — Mix 1 pint flour, Mi teaspoon 
salt, 1 heaping teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, 
2 tablespoons sugar. Rub in 2 tablespoons 
butter. Beat 2 eggs, add Mi cup milk, add 

THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER 



more milk if necessary to mix to soft dough. 
Roll out 1 inch thick, sprinkle with 1 cup 
chopped dates, almonds, figs, mixed together. 
Roll little thinner, sprinkle with granulated 
sugar. Lay on greased shallow pan, bake in 
hot oven. Break in squares, serve hot. 

Tea Cakes. — 3 cups flour, lMi teaspoons 
Royal Baking Powder, Mi teaspoon salt, % cup 
sugar, 3 tablespoons butter, 1 teaspoon cara- 
way-seeds, milk to mix to soft biscuit-dough. 
Roll out V4 inch thick, cut in circles, and bake 
in flat pan in hot oven. 

Strudel Cakes. — Mix 1 quart flour, 1 tea- 
spoon salt, 1 tablespoon sugar, 2 teaspoons 
Royal Baking Powder. Rub in 4 tablespoons 
butter, mix to soft dough with milk, roll out 
Mi inch thick. Have ready mixed 1 cup chopped 
almonds, Mi pound seedless raisins, Mi cup 
grated maple sugar. Cut dough in 2 pieces. 
On 1 piece spread nut mixture, cover with 
other piece, roll together with pin. Cut in 4- 
inch squares, brush tops with milk, sprinkle 
with maple sugar, bake in quick oven. 

Bath Buns. — Mix and sift 1 quart flour, 2 
teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, Mi teaspoon 
salt, 2 /3 cup sugar, 1 teaspoon powdered cinna- 
mon. Add grated rind 1 lemon. Mi cup chopped 
citron. Rub in Mt cup butter. Beat 6 egg yolks, 
add % cup milk, and mix all to soft dough, 
adding more milk if needed. Mold with the 
hands in round buns. Place 1 inch apart on 
greased pans. Brush with milk, sprinkle with 
chopped citron, and bake in quick oven. 

Cinnamon Buns. — Sift together 1 pint 
flour, 1 tablespoon sugar, Mt teaspoon salt, 1 
heaping teaspoon Royal Baking Powder. Rub 
in 2 tablespoons butter, mix with milk to soft 
dough. Roll out Mi inch thick, spread with 
soft butter, granulated sugar, and powdered 
cinnamon. Roll up like jelly roll, cut in inch 
slices, lay close together in greased pan, and 
bake in quick oven. 

Buchtels. — Prepare dough as for cinnamon 
buns, but take double quantity butter. Roll 
out Mt inch thick, cut in 4-inch squares with 
jagging-iron. In center of each place 2 stewed 
and pitted prunes and pinch of grated lemon 
rind. Draw corners of dough together, pinch. 
Place close together in greased pan, brush with 
white of egg, sprinkle with granulated sugar, 
and bake in hot oven. 

Triangles. — Prepare dough as for cinnamon 
buns. Roll out, cut in strips, then in 3-cor- 
nered pieces. Brush each with white of egg, 
press in center Mi lump sugar, surround with 
seeded raisins, and bake in hot oven. 

Eccles Biscuit. — Sift together 1 pint flour, 
Mt teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking 
Powder. Rub in 2 scant tablespoons butter. 
Mix to a soft dough with milk ; roll out Mj inch 
thick. Have ready a mixture of Mi cup each 
chopped seeded raisins, citron, cleaned cur- 
rants, finely chopped almonds or other nuts, 
2 tablespoons granulated sugar, V4 teaspoon 
cinnamon, V\ teaspoon allspice, pinch cloves, 
and just enough good sherry or brandy to 
moisten. Cut the dough in ovals. On each 
put a spoonful of the filling ; brush edges with 
white of egg ; fold over to make pointed oval 
cakes. Turn plain side up, press lightly to 
flatten. With sharp scissors make 3 short cuts 



IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



21 



across top. Sift over little powdered sugar, 
place well apart on greased pans, and bake in 
quick oven till pale brown. Good for lunch- 
Currant Loaf. — 3 cups flour, % cup butter, 
Mi cup sugar, Mi teaspoon salt, 1 cup cleaned 
currants, grated rind 1 lemon, 2 teaspoons 
Royal Baking Powder. Mix dry ingredients, 
rub in butter, add currants and lemon rind, 
mix to a very thick drop batter with cold milk. 
Turn into well-greased loaf -pan, bake 1 hour 
in moderate oven. 

Fruit Wheels. — Sift together 2 cups flour, 
1 heaping teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, Mi 
teaspoon salt, 1 tablespoon sugar. Rub in 2 
large tablespoons butter. Mix to soft dough 
with milk ; roll out Mi inch thick. Spread 
thickly with soft butter, dust with 1 teaspoon 
flour, 4 tablespoons granulated sugar, 1 tea- 
spoon cinnamon!; sprinkle over V3 cup each of 
seeded and cut raisins, chopped citron, and 
cleaned currants. Roll up, cut in 1-inch slices, 
put 1 inch apart on greased flat pans, and bake 
in hot oven. 

Fruit Short Cakes 

THE old-fashioned fruit short cakes were 
generally made with flour, soda, sour 
milk, and shortening, and were restricted 
to the strawberry season. We now use Royal 
Baking Powder for lightening them, employ 
all the fruits of the various seasons, and thus 
feast ourselves upon the delicate confections 
almost the whole year through. The short 
cake made with Royal Baking Powder and 
sweet milk is incomparably better, surer, and 
more healthful than the old-fashioned concoc- 
tion. Too much skill was required in combin- 
ing soda and sour milk. The milk had to be 
at just the right stage of sourness ; not a grain 
more of soda could be used than was sufficient 
to neutralize the acid in the milk, or the cake 
would be yellow, with a disagreeable odor and 
soapy taste ; if too little, the cake was heavy. 
But even the young or inexperienced house- 
keeper will find that with Royal Baking Powder 
a perfect short cake is an easy and agreeable 
task. The baking powder only needs to be 
thoroughly sifted with the flour, so that it may 
evenly lighten the cake. Use sweet milk al- 
ways. For the old-fashioned short cake no 
eggs are needed, the dough being put together 
in the same way as for baking powder biscuit. 
Throughout the summer fresh fruit of all 



kinds can be used. With cold weather substi- of fresh fruit, finishing as for other short cakes 



salt, and powder together, rub in the butter 
cold; add the milk and mix into a smooth 
dough, just soft enough to handle; divide in 
half, and roll out to the size of breakfast-plates ; 
lay on a greased baking-tin (fig. XIV), and 
bake in hot oven 20 minutes ; separate the 
cakes without cutting, as cutting makes them 
heavy. 

Short Cake, 2. — 1 quart flour, Mi cup but- 
ter, Mi teaspoon salt, 1 tablespoon sugar, 2 
heaping teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, milk 
to make soft dough. Mix as in first receipt, 
and bake. 

Short Cake, 3.— 1 pint flour, 3 tablespoons 
butter, Mi teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoons sugar, 2 
scant teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, milk 
to mix to stiff batter. Sift dry ingredients; 
add milk to make very thick batter in which 
spoon will stand upright. Turn into shallow 
greased pan (fig. XIII), and steam 30 minutes ; 
place in hot oven 10 minutes. When cold split 
in 2 or 3 thicknesses. 

Short Cake, 4.— Cream Mi cup butter and 

1 cup sugar. Add 2 well-beaten eggs, Mi tea- 
spoon salt ; then, alternately, Mi cup milk and 

2 cups flour in which is sifted 2 teaspoons 
Royal Baking Powder. Bake in layer-cake 
tins and use when cold. 

Apple Short Cake.— Pare, core, and cut 8 
sour apples into eighths. Put in earthen dish 
with 1 tablespoon butter, 1 tablespoon lemon 
juice, V2 cup sugar, and a pinch of cinnamon 
or nutmeg. Cover and bake in moderate oven 
till dark red and tender. When cold spread 
between layers of short cake and serve with 
plain or whipped cream or a cold boiled custard. 

Blackberry Short Cake.— -Wash and drain 
1 quart berries. Sweeten, spread between lay- 
ers of short cake, and serve with cream or a 
cold custard. 

Strawberry ShortCake.— Pick, hull, wash, 
and drain berries. Sweeten, spread between 
bottom layers of short cake. Garnish top layer 
with large whole berries, dust with sugar, and 
serve with cream or custard. 

Raspberry Short Cake. — Prepare as for 
strawberry short cake. 

Cherry Short Cake. — Make as for straw- 
berry short cake, using pitted sweet or tart 
cherries. 

Peach Short Cake. — Pare and slice peaches. 
Finish as for strawberry short cake. 

Banana Short Cake. — Peel and slice ba- 
nanas. Finish as for strawberry short cake. 

Canned Fruit Short Cake. — Any canned 
fruit, drained from syrup, may be used in place 



tutes are found in tropical fruits such as ba- 
nanas and oranges, stewed fruits such as prunes, 
dried, and all varieties of canned fruits ; but it 
is better to keep the fruit short cake for those 
seasons when ripe, fresh fruits are obtainable. 
The cake part for a fruit short cake may be 
made from any one of the following receipts : 

Short Cake. — 1 quart flour, 1 teaspoon salt, 
2 heaping teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, 2 
tablespoons butter, 1 pint milk. Sift the flour, 

THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER 



Huckleberry Short Cake.— 2 cups susrar. 
Mi cup butter, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 pint milk, 2 
heaping teaspoons Royal Baking Powder sifted 
into 3 cups flour, 1 quart washed and well- 
drained huckleberries, more flour to make a 
very thick batter. Bake in greased dripping- 
pan, break in squares, serve hot with butter. 

Individual Short Cakes. — Make short cake, 
2. Roll out Mi inch thick, cut in rounds size 
of small saucer. Bake and finish as for other 
short cakes. 



IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



22 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



Doughnuts and Crullers 

THESE old-fashioned "fried cakes," as 
they used to be called, need the addition 
of Royal Baking Powder to make them 
light. By its use less shortening is necessary 
and the cakes are more tender and far more 
digestible. After it is mixed with the flour 
the other ingredients are added and the dough 
quickly rolled out, cut, and at once cooked. 
The fat should be in a deep pot (to obviate any 
danger of boiling over), and should be of suffi- 
cient depth to cover the dough when first 
dropped in. It should be smoking hot, or the 
dough will absorb grease and be soggy. Not 
more than half a dozen should be dropped in 
at one time, or the fat will be unduly cooled 
and some of the cakes submerged during the 
entire cooking ; in which case the cakes when 
cooked will be greasy and not light. One 
or two pieces of dough should be cooked first 
as testers. When done the cakes should be 
drained on unglazed paper, then rolled in pow- 
dered sugar. 

Doughnuts. — Beat well together 2 eggs and 
2 cups granulated sugar. Add 1 pint milk and 
1 quart flour in which are mixed and sifted 3 
teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, 1 teaspoon 
salt, and 1 grated nutmeg. Beat well, then 
add more flour to make a soft dough. Roll 
out Mi inch thick, cut in rings or small balls, 
and fry brown in a deep kettle of smoking-hot 
fat. 

Doughnuts, 2. — Vis cup butter, 1 cup sugar, 
lMi pints flour, \Mi teaspoons Royal Baking 
Powder, 1 egg, \Mi cups milk, 1 teaspoon extract 
nutmeg. Rub the butter, sugar, and egg to- 
gether smooth. Sift the flour and powder to- 
gether, add it to the butter, the milk, etc. Mix 
into a soft dough ; well flour the board, roll 
out the dough to Mi inch in thickness, cut out 
with large biscuit-cutter, and fiy to a light 
brown in plenty of lard made hot for the pur- 
pose. Serve with sifted sugar over them. 

Doughnuts, 3. — 3i cup granulated sugar, 
yolks and whites 2 eggs, 3 tablespoons melted 
butter or lard, 3 cups flour, 3 heaping teaspoons 
Royal Baking Powder, Vz teaspoon grated nut- 
meg. Add beaten whites last, then add enough 
more flour to make a soft dough. Roll Mi inch 
thick, cut, and fry as directed. 

Doughnuts, 4.— Sift together 2 teaspoons 
Royal Baking Powder, 1 quart flour, Mi cup 
sugar, Ms teaspoon salt. Add 2 well-beaten 
eggs, 1 cup milk, 1 teaspoon vanilla, a little 
more flour if necessary to make a soft dough. 
Roll out, cut, and fry. 

Doughnuts, 5.— Scald 1 cup milk, add Mi 
cup sugar, stir till dissolved, and cool. Add 

1 Mi cups flour sifted with V4 teaspoon salt and 

2 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, the well- 
beaten whites 3 eggs, 1 tablespoon melted but- 
ter, and enough more flour to make a soft 
dough. Roll, cut, and fry. 



German Doughnuts. — Scald 1 pint milk, 
pour hot over 1 pint flour, and beat till smooth ; 
add Mi teaspoon salt, and let cool. Add beaten 
yolks 4 eggs, 1 tablespoon melted butter, 1 
teaspoon flavoring, Mi cup sugar, beaten whites 
of eggs, 1 cup flour mixed with 2 teaspoons 
Royal Baking Powder, and more flour to make 
a soft dough. Roll, cut, and fry. 

Puff ball Doughnuts. — 3 eggs, 1 cup sugar, 
1 pint milk, Mi teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon extract 
vanilla, 2 heaping teaspoons Royal Baking 
Powder sifted with 2 cups flour, more flour to 
make a thick batter in which spoon will stand 
upright. Drop by small spoonfuls in kettle of 
smoking-hot fat and fry brown. 

Crullers. — lMi cups sugar, 1 cup milk, 2 
eggs, 2 tablespoons butter, melted, 1 teaspoon 
vanilla, 1 teaspoon powdered cinnamon, Mi tea- 
spoon salt, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder 
mixed with 2 cups flour, more flour to make a 
soft dough. Roll out, cut in squares, cut slits 
in each with jagging-iron, and braid together. 
Fry in smoking-hot fat. 

Crullers, 2. — 1 quart flour, Mi cup lard, Mi 
cup butter, 1 cup sugar, lMi teaspoons Royal 
Baking Powder, % pint milk, 2 eggs, 1 tea- 
spoon extract nutmeg. Sift the flour, sugar, 
and powder together ; rub in the lard and but- 
ter ; add the beaten eggs, extract, and milk. 
Mix into a smooth dough, just soft enough 
to handle conveniently. Roll out with the 
rolling-pin on a well-floured board ; cut into 
strips about Mi inch wide, twist in different 
shapes, and fry to a light brown color in plenty 
hot lard. Serve with sifted sugar. 

Crullers, 3. — 2 cups brown sugar, lMi cups 
butter, 6 eggs, Mi nutmeg, grated, 2 teaspoons 
Royal Baking Powder, flour to make soft 
dough. Roll, cut with jagging-iron, fry as 
directed. 

Crullers, 4. — 1 cup sugar, 3 tablespoons 
butter, 1 cup cream, 3 cups flour mixed with 2 
teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, and Mi tea- 
spoon salt, adding enough flour to make soft 
dough. Roll out, cut in 2-inch squares, and 
slash with jagging-iron. Fry, drain, and roll 
in sugar. 

Dutch Crullers.— 2 eggs, 1 teaspoon grated 
nutmeg, 1 cup sugar, 1 cup cream, V4 teaspoon 
salt, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, suffi- 
cient flour to mix to a soft dough. Roll out, 
cut in squares, cut several times in center with 
jagging-iron ; fry brown in kettle of deep 
smoking-hot fat. 

Fried Cakes. — 2% cups flour, 2 teaspoons 
Royal Baking Powder, Mi cup milk, Mi tea- 
spoon salt, 2 eggs, 1 scant tablespoon melted 
butter, 5 tablespoons sugar. Sift dry materials 
together. Add beaten eggs, milk, and melted 
butter. Drop by small spoonfuls in deep 
smoking-hot fat, fry brown, drain on unglazed 
paper. 

Rye Drop Cakes.— 1 heaping cup rye meal, 
1 heaping cup flour, 1 teaspoon salt, 3 table- 
spoons molasses, 1 cup milk, 2 eggs, 2Mi tea- 
spoons Royal Baking Powder. Sift dry ma- 
terials together. Add milk, molasses, and 
beaten eggs. Drop by spoonfuls in deep smok- 
ing-hot fat. When brown drain on paper. 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



23 



Wonders. — 3 eggs, 3 tablespoons melted 
shortening, 3 tablespoons sugar, 1 teaspoon 
Royal Baking Powder mixed with 1 cup flour. 
Add more flour to make stiff dough, roll very 
thin. Cut in 3-inch squares ; in each cut sev- 
eral slits; run finger through and separate, 
then dent them. Fry and roll in sugar. 



Dumplings 



APPLE DUMPLINGS, ROYAL.— 1 quart 
flour, thoroughly mix with it 3 teaspoons 
i. Royal Baking Powder and a small tea- 
spoon salt; rub in a piece of butter or lard 
the size of an egg, and then add 1 medium po- 
tato, grated in the flour; after the butter is 
well mixed, stir in milk and knead to the con- 
sistency of soft biscuit-dough ; break off pieces 
of dough large enough to close over 4 quarters 
of an apple (or other fruit as desired) without 
rolling, and lay in an earthen dish and steam 
until the fruit" is tender. Serve with brandy 
sauce. 

Apple Dumplings, 2. — Paste, 2 ; 6 apples, 
peeled, cored, and sliced, 1 cup sugar. Line 
6 cups, well greased, with the paste rolled out 
thin, wet edges, fill with apples, some of the 
sugar, cover with more paste; put in shal- 
low stewpan, large enough to contain them, 
with boiling water to reach half-way up the 
cups ; steam thus 45 minutes ; turn out on 
dish, sift sugar over them ; serve with spice 
sauce. 

Apple Dumplings, 3.— Paste, 3; 8 apples, 
peeled and cored, 1 cup sugar. Roll out the 
paste thin, cut into 8 squares of 4 inches, 
lay on each an apple with sugar in aperture 
made by removing core, wet four corners of 
paste, and bring them to top of apple and fas- 
ten ; sift sugar over them ; lay on baking-sheet 
and bake in hot oven 25 minutes ; serve with 
hard sauce. 

Berry Dumplings. — Use berries of any 
kind carefully picked, hulled or prepared, and 
make as for apple dumplings, putting 1 or 
2 tablespoons of berries in each dunipling. 

English Dumpling. — 1 pint flour, 1 cup 
finely chopped suet, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon 
Royal Baking Powder. Mix and sift flour, salt, 
and baking powder. Add suet ; mix to firm 
dough with ice-water. Knead for 2 minutes ; 
roll out Mi inch thick. Put a floured cloth over 
a bowl ; on it spread the crust. Pill with 
sliced apples mixed with sugar and a little 
powdered cinnamon. Draw up crust and cloth 
so as to completely cover apples ; tie cloth, al- 
lowing a little room to swell. Drop in kettle 
of rapidly boiling water, with trivet at bottom 
to prevent scorching. Keep at a rapid boil for 

2 hours. If water stops boiling the dumpling 
will be heavy. Or place in steamer and steam 

3 hours. Serve hot with cream and sugar or a 
liquid sauce. 

Farina Dumplings. — 1 quart milk, 10 ounces 
farina, 3 eggs, lMi teaspoons Royal Baking 
Powder, a tablespoon fresh butter, Mi pound 
flour. Bring milk to a boil, stir in farina, and 



boil till well done, continually stirring. After 
cooling, stir in the melted butter and eggs 
previously beaten up, and last add flour sifted 
with baking powder and salt. Drop with ta- 
blespoon into boiling water, well salted; boil 
about 15 minutes till they rise ; take out with 
skimmer and serve with fruit sauce. 

Peach Dumplings.— Proceed as directed 
for apple dumplings, 1. 

Peach Dumplings, 2.— Bring 1 cup water, 
2 tablespoons butter, to boiling point ; turn in 
quickly 1 cup dry flour ; stir till mixture draws 
away from sides of pan. Take from fire and 
cool. Work in 4 eggs, % cup flour mixed with 
Mi teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, more flour 
if necessary to make a soft dough. Pat out in 
a cake, cut in rounds with a saucer. On each 
place a pared, unpitted peach. Draw dough 
round to cover the fruit. Place in greased 
pan, brush with milk, and bake 30 minutes in 
moderate oven. Serve with clear sauce. 

Receipts for making dumplings for a stew 
or fricassee frequently call for shortening. 
This is a mistake, and usually results in 
heavy, soggy dumplings. Heaviness may also 
be caused by a removal of the lid of pot or 
steamer before the dumplings are done. Flour, 
salt, Royal Baking Powder, and sweet milk 
are all that are needed to make tender, fluffy 
dumplings of this kind. The dry ingredients 
should be sifted carefully together, then quickly 
mixed with the milk. During the cooking the 
liquid in pot or steamer should be kept at a 
steady boil. No more batter or dough should 
be dropped in at one time than will cover the 
surface of the liquid or rest on top of the meat, 
for, if too many dumplings are dropped in at 
once, those underneath are sure to be soggy. 
The cover should not be lifted until the dump- 
lings are done. 

Dumplings for Soup.— 1 cup flour, V 4 tea- 
spoon salt, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, 
sifted together. Add M3 cup finely chopped 
suet, and enough milk to make stiff dough. 
Bake into dumplings size of marbles, drop into 
soup, cover, and boil 10 minutes. 

Egg Dumplings for Soup.— Beat 2 eggs, add 
l k teaspoon salt, 2 tablespoons milk. Sift 1 
cup flour with 1 scant teaspoon Royal Baking 
Powder, add egg mixture, and more flour if 
necessary to make thick batter. Drop by half 
teaspoonfuls in boiling soup; cover, cook 10 
minutes. 

Dumplings for Stews.— Mix and sift 1 pint 
flour, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, Mi tea- 
spoon salt Mix to soft dough with milk. 
Turn on board, roll out 1 inch thick, cut in 
small circles. Roll eack in flour, drop on top 
simmering stew. Cover, cook 20 minutes 
without opening pot. 

Dumplings for Stews, 2. — Mix 2 cups flour, 
1 teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, Ms teaspoon 
salt. Add milk to mix to thick batter. Drop 
by small spoonfuls over boiling stew, and cook 
as in preceding receipt. 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



24 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



Suet Dumplings.— 1 cup bread crumbs, 2 
tablespoons finely chopped beef suet, whites 
and yolks 2 eggs beaten separately, Ms teaspoon 
salt, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking Powder sifted 
with 1 cup flour, sufficient milk to mix to stiff 
paste. Flour hands and make into balls. 
Wring small cloths in hot water, du * with 
flour, lay ball in each and tie, leaving room to 
swell. Cook in rapidly boiling water 45 min- 
utes, and serve with liquid sauce (see Sauces). 

Potato Dumplings.— 1 dozen large potatoes, 
6 tablespoons flour, 2 tablespoons Royal Bak- 
ing Powder, 1 tablespoon butter, 3 eggs, salt, 
and nutmeg. Grate potatoes, which have been 
boiled and skinned the day before ; mix with 
the flour, previously sifted together with bak- 
in:c powder, add the melted butter, and eggs 
on.; by one, and salt and nutmeg to taste ; 
form into balls about size of a small apple, put 
into boiling water, which has been well salted, 
boil 15 minutes ; take out with skimmer, and 
serve with any kind of fricassee or pot-roast. 

Suet Dumplings (Danish). — 1 cup suet, 
chopped fine, 1 cup grated English muffins or 
bread, 1 cup flour, Ms teaspoon Royal Baking 
Powder, Ms cup sugar, 2 eggs, 1 pint milk, large 
pinch salt. Sift together powder and flour, 
add beaten eggs, grated muffins, sugar, suet, 
and milk ; form into smooth batter, which 
drop by tablespoons into pint boiling milk, 
three or four at a time ; when done, dish and 
pour over them milk they were boiled in. 



* 



Puddings 



APPLE PUDDING (BOSTON).— Paste, 3; 
12 or 14 apples, peeled, cored, and sliced ; 
l. 1 teaspoon extract nutmeg, lMs cups 
sugar. Line edge of deep earthenware dish 
with the paste ; pack in the apples, add sugar, 
Ms cup water, and extract ; wet edge of paste ; 
lay on cover of paste, press two together, orna- 
ment edge, wash with milk, bake in moderate 
oven ; serve with rich cream. 

Apple Pudding (English). — Paste, 2 ; 12 or 
14 apples, peeled, cored, and sliced; 1 teaspoon 
extract nutmeg, lMs cups sugar. Line earthen- 
ware pudding-mold with paste, pack in apples, 
sugar, and extract ; wet edges ; cover, pinch 
edges together firmly ; place in saucepan Ms full 
boiling water. 

Apple Tapioca Pudding. — Pare and core 
enough apples to fill dish ; put into each apple 
bit of lemon peel. Soak Ms pint tapioca in 1 
quart lukewarm water 1 hour, add a little salt ; 
flavor with lemon ; pour over apples. Bake 
until apples are tender. Serve cold with 
cream and sugar. 



Blackberry Pudding. — Paste, 2 ; 1 quart 
berries, lMs cups sugar. Proceed as directed 
for apple pudding. 

Blackberry Pudding, 2. — Proceed as di- 
rected for cottage pudding, adding lMs cups 
blackberries ; serve with liquid sauce. 

Batter Pudding (Baked).— Proceed as di 
rected for batter pudding (boiled), baking it in 
well-buttered pudding-dish 35 minutes ; serve 
with foaming sauce. 

THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER 



Batter Pudding (with Fruit). — 1 cup flour, 
1 teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, pint milk, 
4 eggs, 2 cups any kind of fruit prepared as 
usual, lMs cups sugar. Sift flour, sugar, and 
powder together, add eggs, beaten, milk, and 
fruit; pour into well-buttered pudding-dish, 
bake in quick oven 40 minutes; serve with 
wine sauce. 

Batter Pudding (Boiled).— lMs cups flour, 1 
teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, Ms teaspoon 
salt, 1 tablespoon butter, 10 drops extract nut- 
meg, 2 eggs, 1 pint milk. Sift flour, salt, and 
powder together ; rub in butter cold ; add eggs, 
beaten, and milk ; mix into batter as for muf- 
fins ; pour into well-buttered mold ; set in sauce- 
pan with boiling water % up sides of mold ; 
steam one hour, and serve with spice sauce. 

Boston Baked Plum Pudding. — lMs cups 
beef suet, freed of skin, chopped very fine, lMs 
cups raisins, stoned, lMs cups currants, washed 
and picked, 1 cup brown sugar, 2 cups flour, 1 
teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, 4 eggs, 1 cup 
milk, Ms cup citron, chopped, pinch salt, 1 
tablespoon extract nutmeg, 1 glass brandy. 
Put all these ingredients in a bowl, eggs as 
they drop from the shell, flour sifted with 
powder, and brandy; mix into rather short 
batter ; pour into well- buttered clean cake-tin, 
bake in steady oven 2 hours ; serve with va- 
nilla sauce. 

Cabinet Pudding. — Ms pound stale sponge 
cake, Ms cup raisins, Ms can peaches, 4 eggs, 
lMs pints milk. Butter plain oval mold ; lay 
in some stale cake, Ms of the raisins, stoned, Mj 
of peaches ; make two layers of remainder of 
cake, raisins, and peaches ; cover with very 
thin slice of bread ; then pour over milk beaten 
with eggs and sugar ; set in saucepan with 
boiling water to reach % up sides of mold, 
steam it 3i hour, turn out carefully on dish, 
and serve with peach sauce. 

Cottage Pudding. — 1 cup sugar, 2 eggs, 2 
cups cream, 1 pint flour, lMs teaspoons Royal 
Baking Powder. Beat the eggs and sugar to- 
gether; add cream, flour with the powder 
sifted in, and a pinch of salt; mix into smooth 
batter as for cup cake ; put into long narrow 
or oval buttered mold, bake in hot oven 30 
minutes ; serve with liquid or foaming sauce. 

Cottage Pudding, 2. — 1 cup sugar, 1 cup 
milk, 1 egg, lump butter size of egg, 1 pint 
flour, salt, 1 heaping teaspoon Royal Baking 
Powder. Sauce. — 1 cup sugar, 1 egg. 1 tea- 
spoon flour, small piece of butter, mixed. Add 
boiling water, let come to boil, flavor with 
extract vanilla. 

Cherry Pudding. — 2 eggs, 1 cup milk, Ms 
teaspoon salt, 1 tablespoon melted butter, lMs 
cups flour, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, 
pinch salt. Mix in order given, turn into 
shallow greased pan. Over top put 2 pounds 
cherriesrpress into the batter, sprinkle with 3 
tablespoons granulated sugar. Bake 30 min- 
utes in moderate oven, serve hot with cream 
and sugar. 

Chocolate Pudding. — 1 quart milk, scalded ; 
lMs squares chocolate, grated ; wet with cold 
milk, and stir into scalded milk. When choco- 
late is dissolved, pour into pudding-dish ; add 
yolks of 6 eggs, well beaten, and 6 table- 
spoons sugar. Bake about % hour. Beat 

IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



25 



whites of eggs to stiff froth ; add 6 tablespoons 
sugar. Spread the frosting over top ; set again 
in oven until a light brown. 

Custard Pudding. — IMj pints milk, 4 eggs, 
1 cup sugar, 2 teaspoons extract vanilla, and 
pinch of salt. Beat eggs and sugar together ; 
dilute with niilk and extract; pour into but- 
tered pudding-dish, set in oven in dripping- 
pan % full of boiling water; bake until firm, 
about 40 minutes, in moderate oven. 

Fig Pudding. — Mi pound good dried figs, 
washed, wiped, and minced; 2 cups fine dry 
bread crumbs, 3 eggs, Mi cup beef suet, pow- 
dered ; 2 scant cups sweet milk, Mi cup white 
sugar, in which 1 teaspoon Royal Baking Pow- 
der has been mixed, little salt. Soak the 
crumbs in milk, add eggs, beaten light with 
sugar, salt, suet, and figs. Beat 3 minutes ; put 
in buttered mold with tight top, set in boiling 
water with weight on cover to prevent mold 
from upsetting, and boil 3 hours. Eat hot 
with hard sauce made of butter, powdered 
sugar, 1 teaspoon extract nutmeg. 

Indian Pudding. — Mi cup flour, lMi cups 
Indian corn meal, Mi cup syrup, Mi teaspoon 
salt, 1 quart milk. Mix flour, corn meal, salt, 
and cup milk together; pour the rest on it, 
boding ; stir once in a while for 30 minutes ; 
bake in moderate oven 2 hours in well-but- 
tered pudding-dish ; serve with wine sauce. 

Lemon Suet Pudding. — 3 cups stale bread, 
1 cup suet, Mi cup sugar, mixed with 1 tea- 
spoon Royal Baking Powder, 4 eggs, 1 table- 
spoon extract lemon, lMi pints milk, pinch salt. 
Grate bread, chop suet, freed of skin, very 
fine, put them in bowl ; add sugar, eggs, beaten, 
salt, and extract ; pour over boiling milk, stir- 
ring it the while ; suffer it to stand 30 minutes, 
covered, then pour into well-buttered pudding- 
dish ; bake in moderate oven 40 minutes ; serve 
with sugar sauce. 

Orange Pudding. — lMi cups stale Royal un- 
fermented bread, 1 cup finely chopped suet, lcup 
sugar, 2 eggs, juice of 1 orange or 1 tablespoon 
extract orange, Mi cup milk. Mix all thor- 
oughly together, fill 6 cups, well greased, boil 
30 minutes. Turn out on dish, serve with 
hard sauce flavored with 1 teaspoon extract 
orange. 

Peach Cottage Pudding. — Make a batter 
with Mi cup sugar, 3 tablespoons melted butter, 
1 beaten egg, 1 cup milk, 2 cups flour, lMi tea- 
spoons Royal Baking Powder. Stir in 2 cups 
sliced peaches, bake in a loaf and serve with 
hard sauce. 

Fine Peach Pudding. — Fill pudding-dish 
with whole peeled peaches, pour over 1 pint 
water, cover, and bake till peaches are tender. 
Drain off juice and let cool. Add to it 2 cups 
milk, 4 beaten eggs, 1 scant cup flour mixed 
with 1 teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, 1 cup 
sugar, 1 tablespoon melted butter, pinch salt. 
Beat hard 4 minutes, pour over peaches in 
dish, bake to rich brown and serve with cream. 

" Poor Man's Pudding." — Mi cup suet, 
chopped, Mi cup seeded raisins, Mi cup currants, 
washed and picked, lMi cups grated bread, 1 
cup flour, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, Mi 
cup brown sugar, 1 pint milk. Mix all well 
together, put into well-greased mold, set in 



saucepan with boiling water to reach Mi up 
sides of mold ; steam 2 hours ; turn out on 
dish carefully ; serve with butter and sugar. 

Plum Pudding (Royal Christmas). — 2 cups 
raisins, 2 cups currants, 2 cups suet, Mi cup 
almonds, blanched, 2 cups flour, 2 cups grated 
bread, Mi cup each citron, orange, and lemon 
peels, 8 eggs, 1 cup sugar, Mi cup cream, 1 gill 
each wine and brandy, large pinch salt, 1 table- 
spoon extract nutmeg, 1 teaspoon Royal Bak- 
ing Powder. Put in large bowl raisins, seeded, 
currants, washed and picked, suet, chopped 
very fine, almonds, cut fine, citron, orange, 
and lemon peels, chopped, sugar, wine, 
brandy, and cream ; lastly, add flour, sifted 
with powder ; mix all well together, putin large, 
well-buttered mold (fig. II) ; set in saucepan 
with boiling water to reach Mi up sides of 
mold, steam thus 5 hours ; turn out on dish 
cai'efully ; serve with Royal wine sauce. 

Plum Pudding, 2. — IV2 cups each grated 
bread, very finely chopped suet, raisins, seeded, 
currants, washed and picked, and coffee sugar, 
Mi cup each citron, milk, and orange marma- 
lade, 4 eggs, 2 cups flour, 1 teaspoon Royal 
Baking Powder, 1 teaspoon each extract cin- 
namon, cloves, and nutmeg. Mix all these 
ingredients well together in large bowl, put in 
well-buttered mold, set in saueepan with boil- 
ing water to reach Mi up its sides ; steam 
thus 3Mi hours; turn out carefully on dish, 
and serve with Royal wine sauce. 

Princess Pudding. — % cup butter, 1 cup 
sugar, 1 large cup flour, 3 eggs, Mi teaspoon 
Royal Baking Powder, small glass brandy. Rub 
to smooth cream butter and sugar ; add eggs, 
1 at a time, beating few minutes after each 
addition ; add flour sifted with powder, and 
brandy; put into mold well buttered, set in 
saucepan with boiling water to reach Mi up 
its sides; steam thus lMi hours; turn out on 
dish carefully ; serve with lemon sauce. 

Raisin Roly Poly. — 2 cups flour, Mi teaspoon 
salt, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, sifted 
together. Rub in 2 tablespoons butter, mix 
with milk to soft dough, roll out Mi inch thick. 
Spread with a little soft butter. Sprinkle 
thickly with seeded raisins, then with 2 ta- 
blespoons granulated sugar. Roll up, pinch 
ends together, lay on buttered pie-plate, and 
steam 30 minutes. Dry off in oven 10 minutes. 
Serve with creamy or liquid sauce. 

Raisin Pudding.— 1 cup finely chopped suet, 
Mi cup sugar, 2 eggs, Mi cup milk, 1 cup entire 
wheat flour, 1 teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, 
1 cup floured raisins. Steam 3 hours. Serve 
with liquid sauce. 

Rice Pudding.— M> cup rice, lMi pints milk, 
Mi cup sugar, large pinch salt, 1 tablespoon 
lemon rind chopped fine. Put rice, washed and 
picked, sugar, salt, and milk in quart pudding- 
dish ; bake in moderate oven 2 hours, stirring 
frequently first 1% hours, then permit it to 
finish cooking with light-colored crust, disturb- 
ing it no more. Eat cold with cream. 

Rice Pudding, 2. — Mi cup rice, 34 pint milk, 
4 apples, peeled, cored, and stewed, M? cup sugar, 
4 eggs. Boil rice in milk until reduced to pulp ; 
beat well with apple sauce and sugar for 10 
minutes, then set aside to cool ; then carefully 
mix in whites of eggs, whipped to stiff froth, 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



26 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



butter the mold, pour in pudding, set in sauce- 
pan with boiling water to reach Mi up its 
sides ; steam slowly for 25 minutes ; permit it 
to stand 3 minutes before turning out ; serve 
with custard sauce. 

Sago Pudding. — 1 quart milk, 4 tablespoons 
sago boiled in the milk till soft ; set dish in 
kettle of hot water, and let sago swell gradu- 
ally. Beat up 3 eggs, and stir into cooked 
milk and sago ; salt and sugar to taste. Then 
put in oven and bake very lightly. Serve 
with creamy sauce. 

Souffle of Different Fruits.— With fruits 
ef a soft and juicy nature, such as peaches, 
plums, apricots, bananas, etc., proceed in this 
manner: Remove the kernels and press the 
fruit through a sieve ; put what you have thus 
obtained in a bowl, adding Vfe pound powdered 
sugar and the whites of 3 eggs ; beat we'll with 
an egg-beater for 5 or 6 minutes. Then take 
the whites of G or 7 eggs and beat them into a 
stiff froth ; mix well together. Put this on a 
dish in a well-heated oven 5 or 6 minutes be- 
fore serving. Sprinkle powdered sugar on 
top. For hard fruits, such as apples, pears, 
etc., cook them first and then press through a 
sieve. The treatment is exactly the same as 
for the others. 

Suet Pudding.— 2 eggs, 1 cup milk, Mi cup 
molasses, Mi cup finely chopped suet, 1 teaspoon 
salt, 2 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder, 3 scant 
cups flour, spices to taste, and 1 cup mixed 
chopped fruit — raisins, citron, currants, or 
almonds. Steam 2 hours and serve with a soft 
sauce. 

Tapioca Pudding. — 1 small cup tapioca, 1 
quart milk, 1 teaspoon butter, 3 tablespoons 
sugar. Soak tapioca in water 4 or 5 hours, 
then add the milk ; flavor with extract lemon, 
or anything else you prefer. Bake slowly 1 
hour. To be made day before it is wanted, 
and eaten cold with cream or milk and sugar. 
Some prefer the pudding made with 3 pints 
milk and no water. 

Tapioca and Cocoanut Pudding. — 1 cup 

tapioca soaked overnight, 1 quart milk, yolks 
4 eggs, whites of 2, 1 cup sugar, 2 tablespoons 
grated cocoanut ; bake Mi hour. Make frosting 
of whites 2 eggs, 3 tablespoons sugar, 2 table- 
spoons grated cocoanut ; spread over pudding 
when baked. Set in oven until a light brown. 



r # 



Sauces for Puddings, Etc. 



B 



RANDY SAUCE.— Proceed as directed 
for wine sauce, 2, substituting brandy 
for wine. 

Canned Fruit Sauce. — Take the syrup from 
any canned fruit, add sufficient sugar to 
sweeten, and an equal quantity of boiling 
water. Measure, and for 1 pint thicken with 
1 tablespoon arrowroot blended in a little wa- 
ter. Boil 10 minutes ; add 1 tablespoon butter 
and stir till melted. 



Currant Jelly Sauce, 2.— Cream 2 table- 
spoons butter ; add gradually % cup stift cur- 
rant jelly slightly softened by standing in 
warm room. Beat well and serve very cold. 

Cream Sauce.— Bring % pint cream slowly 
to boil ; set in stewpan boiling water ; when it 
reaches boiling point add sugar, then i our 
slowly on whipped whites of 2 eggs in bowl ; 
add 1 teaspoon extract vanilla and use. 

Creamy Sauce. — Cream 2 tablespoons but- 
ter ; beat in by degrees Mi cup powdered sugar, 
2 tablespoons each of thick cream and sherry. 
Beat long and hard. Just before serving st and 
bowl over hot water and beat till sauce lccks 
creamy but is not hot enough to melt the 
butter. 

Custard Sauce. — 1 pint milk, yolks 4 eggs, 
% cup sugar. Set over fire and stir until thick. 

Duchesse Sauce. — Boil 2 ounces grated 
chocolate in Mi pint milk 5 minutes; strain 
on 2 yolks of eggs beaten with Mi gill cream 
and Mi cup sugar ; strain, return to fire, stir 
until thick as honey; remove and add 1 tea- 
spoon extract vanilla. 

Foaming Sauce. — "Whip white 1 egg and Mi 
cup powdered sugar to a stiff froth. Whip 
separately 1 cup thick cream to a solid froth. 
Mix lightly together, flavor with 1 tablespoon 
sherry. 

Hard Sauce. — Beat 1 cup sugar and Mi cup 
butter to white cream ; add whites 2 eggs ; 
beat few minutes longer; add tablespoon 
brandy and teaspoon extract nutmeg ; put on 
ice until needed. 

Golden Sauce. — Make hard sauce as above 
without egg whites or flavoring. Beat in 
gradually the yolks of 2 raw eggs and add 
flavoring to suit. The color maybe accentu- 
ated by the addition of a little yellow color- 
paste. 

Hygienic Cream Sauce. — Mt pint milk, Mi 
pint cream, yolk 1 egg, 1 tablespoon buckwheat 
dissolved in little milk, large pinch salt. Bring 
milk and cream to boil in thick, well-lined 
saucepan ; add to it buckwheat dissolved in 
milk, stirring rapidly to prevent lumping ; al- 
low it to boil 5 .minutes; remove from Are, 
beat in the yolk of egg diluted with a table- 
spoon milk. 

Lemon Sauce. — Boil 1 cup sugar and 1 cup 
water together 15 minutes, then remove ; when 
cooled a little, add Mi teaspoon extract lemon 
and 1 tablespoon lemon juice. 

Molasses Sauce. — Boil together 10 minutes 
1 cup molasses, 1 tablespoon vinegar, 1 table- 
spoon butter, pinch salt. For apple puddings. 

Orange Sauce. — To golden sauce made as 
above add the grated yellow rind and 1 table- 
spoon of the juice of an orange. 

Peach Sauce.— Place peach juice from can 
in small saucepan ; add equal volume of wa- 
ter, little more sugar, and 8 or 10 raisins ; boil 
this 10 minutes, strain, and just before serv- 
ing add 8 drops extract bitter almonds. 



Currant Jelly Sauce.— Melt 1 cup red-cur- Rexford Sauce.— Dissolve 1 teaspoon corn- 
rant jelly, add 1 glass white wine, and 1 tea- starch in little water ; add it to 1 cup boiling 
spoon extract raspberry. I water, with % cup brown sugar ; boil 10 min- 

THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



27 



utes; remove from fire; add Mi cup cider, 
scalding hot, 1 large tablespoon good butter, 
and yolks 2 eggs. 

Royal Wine Sauce. — Bring slowly to boil- 
ing point Mi pint wine ; then add yolks of 4 
eggs and 1 cup sugar ; whip it on fire until in 
state of high froth and a little thick ; remove 
and use as directed. 

Sugar Sauce. — Beat to light cream Mi cup 
sugar, flavored with M> teaspoon extract lemon 
and Mi cup butter; add yolks of 2 eggs and 
place on ice until wanted. 

Vanilla Sauce.— Put Mi pint milk in small 
saucepan over fire ; when scalding hot, add 
yolks 3 eggs ; stir until thick as boiled custard ; 
add, when taken from the fire and cooled, 1 
tablespoon extract vanilla and whites of eggs 
whipped stiff. 

Wine Sauce. — \ pint water, 1 cup sugar, 
1 small teaspoon corn-starch, 1 teaspoon each 
extract lemon and cinnamon, Mi gill wine. 
Boil water, add corn-starch dissolved in little 
cold water, and the sugar; boil 15 minutes, 
strain ; when about to serve, add extracts and 
wine. 

Wine Sauce, 2. — Mi pint water, 1 cup sugar, 
Mi teaspoon corn-starch, 1 teaspoon each ex- 
tract bitter almonds and vanilla, Mi cup white 
wine. Stir 2 tablespoons of sugar on the fire 
in thick saucepan, with 1 tablespoon water, 
until very dark, but not burned; add water 
boiling, rest of sugar, the corn-starch dissolved; 
boil 10 minutes ; when about to serve, strain, 
add extracts and wine. 



Pies 

THE richest pastry for pies is called puff 
paste, and much skill and practice 
are required to make it flaky, tender, 
and very light. First-class puff paste will rise 
in baking to double its thickness and be in 
light, flaky layers and without greasiness. The 
novice must learn to handle it as lightly and 
little as possible in rolling and turning. It 
should be put in the ice-box as soon as made 
and stand at least twelve hours before being 
used. 

Pastry flour should always be used for pie 
crust. It is whiter than bread flour and when 
rubbed between the fingers it feels very smooth 
and soft, like corn-starch. Carefully sift before 
using. 

Where it is desired to have a plainer pastry, 
or one less troublesome to make and more 
economical, the use of a small quantity of 
Royal Baking Powder will give a light and 
tender crust. As in other cases, the baking 
powder must be mixed and sifted with the 
flour before the shortening is added. Sweet 
home-made lard may be used in place of butter, 
•either wholly or in part, giving a less expen- 



sive but equally good and light paste. Never 
use sour milk or so-called prepared or self- 
raising flours. 

Paste for Pies.— 3 cups sifted flour, Mi tea- 
spoon Royal Baking Powder, large pinch salt, 

1 cup cream, Mi cup butter. Sift flour, salt, 
and powder together; add the cream; mix 
into smooth, rather firm paste ; flour the board, 
roll it out thin ; spread the butter on it evenly, 
fold in three ; roll out thin, and fold in three ; 
repeat twice more and use. 

Paste, 2. — 3 cups flour, Mi teaspoon Royal 
Baking Powder, Mi pound beef suet, freed of 
skin and chopped very fine, 1 cup water. 
Place the flour, sifted with the powder, in 
bowl ; add suet and water ; mix into smooth, 
rather firm dough. 

Paste, 3.-3 cups sifted flour, Mi cup lard, 
lMs cups butter, Ms teaspoon Royal Baking 
Powder, 1 cup water. Cut lard into flour, 
sifted with powder; mix into smooth, firm 
paste with the water ; place it to cool for 15 
minutes ; meanwhile press milk and salt from 
butter by pressing in clean, wet towel, and 
flour it. Roll out dough on well -floured board ; 
place butter on it; fold dough over it, com- 
pletely covering butter ; roll it out lightly to 
Mi inch in thickness, turn it over, fold each 
end to middle, flour it, roll out again; fold 
ends to middle, and turn it; repeat this 3 
times more, and use. If this paste is made in 
summer, put on ice after each operation of 
folding and rolling. 

Paste, 4.-5 cups flour, 1 cup butter, 1 cup 
lard, 1 cup water, Mi teaspoon Royal Baking 
Powder. Sift flour with powder ; rub in lard 
and butter cold ; add the water ; mix into a 
smooth, lithe dough. 

Paste, s (Puff Paste).— 3 cups sifted flour, 

2 cups butter, 1 egg yolk, a little salt. This is 
difficult to make. The essentials are : A cool 
place to make it in, ice broken up in 2 shallow 
cake-pans, good flour, and butter, firm, with 
salt and buttermilk worked out. Sift flour on 
pastry slab, form it in a ring with back of 
your nand. Place in center the egg yolk and 
salt ; add a little ice-water, and from inside of 
ring gradually take flour, adding a little at a 
time, as you require it, more ice-water, about a 
cup altogether, until you have smooth, fine 
paste, very tenacious and lithe. Place in ice- 
box 15 minutes, then roll out to size of a din- 
ner-plate ; lay on it butter, and wrap over it 
edges of dough, carefully covering it ; turn it 
upside down, roll out very thin ; then turn 
face down — the face is side of paste next to 
rolling-pin — folding it in three, squarely ; re- 
peat this three times more, placing it in thin tin 
on the broken ice, and other tin containing 
ice on it, after each turn or operation of fold- 
ing and rolling. By this method this diffi- 
cult puff paste may be made successfully in 
hottest weather. 

Paste, 6. — 3 cups sifted flour, 1 large cup 
butter, Mi teaspoon Royal Baking Powder, 3 
tablespoons sugar, Mi cup milk. Sift flour 
with powder and sugar, rub in butter, add 
milk; mix into a smooth dough of medium 
stiffness. 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



28 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



Apple Pot Pie. — 14 apples, peeled, cored, 
and sliced, \Mi pints flour, 1 teaspoon Royal 
Baking Powder, 1 cup sugar, Mi cup butter, ,1 
cup milk, large pinch salt. Sift flour with 
powder and salt, rub in butter cold, add milk, 
mix into dough as for tea biscuits ; with it line 
shallow stewpan to within 2 inches of bottom ; 
pour in lMi cups water, apples, and sugar ; wet 
edges and cover with rest of dough ; put cover 
on, set it to boil 20 minutes, then place in 
moderate oven until apples are cooked ; then 
remove from oven, cut top crust in four equal 
parts ; dish apples, lay on them pieces of side 
crust cut in diamonds, and pieces of top crust 
on a plate ; serve with cream. 

Apple Pie. — 5 or 6 apples, 1 cup sugar, Mj 
cup water, 1 teaspoon extract lemon, paste, 
4. Peel, quarter, and core apples, put in stew- 
pan with sugar and water ; when tender, re- 
move ; when cold, add extract and fill pie-plate, 
lined with paste; wet the edges, cover with 
paste rolled out thin, and wash with milk; 
bake in steady, moderate oven 20 minutes. 

Apple Pie, 2. — 3 tart apples, % cup sugar, 
Mi lemon rind grated, paste, 4. Peel, core, and 
slice apples very thin ; line pie-plate with paste ; 
put in apples, sugar, and little water ; wet the 
edges, cover with paste rolled out very thin : 
wash with milk ; bake in steady, moderate 
oven 25 minutes — or till apples are cooked. 

Dried Apple Pie. — Stew apples until quite 
soft ; rub through a colander ; have them juicy. 
Beat 2 eggs, saving the white of 1 ; % cup 
butter, Mi cup sugar to every pie ; season to 
taste. Quantity of sugar must be governed 
somewhat by the acidity of the apples. Bake 
with a bottom crust ; while they are baking 
make a frosting of the white of 1 egg ; when 
pies are done spread frosting evenly over the 
top ; set again in the oven and brown slightly. 

Cream Pie and Oranges. — Cut the oranges 
in thin slices and sprinkle sugar over them ; 
let them stand for 2 or 3 hours ; serve in ordi- 
nary fruit-plates. The pie is made with a 
bottom crust only, and that not thick, but 
light and flaky. Take 1 coffee-cup thick, sweet 
cream, Mi cup pulverized sugar, 1 tablespoon 
flour, 1 egg ; flavor with extract lemon ; bake 
until you are sure the crust is brown and hard, 
so that it will not absorb the custard. 

Banbury Tarts. — Chop 1 cup seeded raisins, 
add Mi cup cleaned currants, 1 cup sugar, 2 
tablespoons cracker dust, 1 beaten egg, juice 
and grated rind 1 lemon. Roll pie crust, 
5 very thin, cut in circles. Lay on each a table- 
spoonful of filling; wet edges of paste; fold 
each side over the middle to form pointed ovals, 
dust with granulated sugar, and bake 20 min- 
utes in slow oven. 

Cocoanut Pie. — Proceed as for custard pie, 
(plain), adding lMi cups grated cocoanut, and 
leaving out Mi pint milk. 

Cranberry Pie. — Paste, 4, 3 cups cran- 
berries, stewed with lMi cups sugar, and 
strained. Line pie-plate with paste ; put in 
cranberry jam ; wash the edges, lay 3 narrow 



Custard Pie (Plain).— Paste, 6, 1% pints 
milk, 4 eggs, 1 cup sugar, 1 teaspoon extract 
lemon, add pinch salt. Line well-greased pie- 
plate V4 inch thick, take ball of paste, flour 
it well, and proceed, with palm of left hand 
pressed against edge, to push the paste from 
center into a thick, high rim on edge of plate. 
Fill while in oven with sugar, eggs, and milk, 
beaten with extract and strained; bake in 
moderate oven 20 minutes. 

Custard Pie (Apple). — Proceed as for cus- 
tard pie (peach), substituting thick, stewed 
apples. 

Custard Pie (Peach). — Proceed as for cus- 
tard pie (plain), laying in bottom of pie some 
cooked, fresh, or canned peaches, then adding 
the custard. 

Fruit Pies of all Kinds. — Use about 3 cups 
prepared fruit for each pie. Heap fruit in 
center. Sprinkle with sugar to sweeten ; if 
juicy, add 1 teaspoon or more of flour with 
sugar. Use pie crust, 4 or 6. 

Gooseberry Pie. — Paste, 5, 3 cups goose- 
berries, stewed with 1 Mi cups sugar 15 minutes, 
and strained. Proceed as directed for cran- 
berry pie. 

Lemon Cream Pie. — Paste, 5, 1 Mi pints milk, 
3 tablespoons corn-starch, 1 cup sugar, 2 table- 
spoons butter, grated rind and juice of 2 lem- 
ons, yolks 4 eggs. Boil milk, add corn-starch 
dissolved in a bttle cold milk; when it re- 
boils, take off, beat in yolks, butter, lemon 
juice, and rind ; pour at once into pie-plates 
lined with paste, having high rim — as 
described in custard pie; bake in hot oven 
until paste is cooked — about 20 minutes. 

Lemon Cream Meringue Pie.— Having 
made the lemon cream pie, whip whites of 4 
eggs to dry froth ; gently incorporate 1 cup 
sugar ; spread over top of pie ; dust with 
powdered sugar ; return to oven to set fawn 
color. 

Lovers of Chocolate, in any and every 
form, can make this addition to a common 
custard pie. Beat 1 egg to a stiff froth, then 
add pulverized sugar and grated chocolate 
with Mi teaspoon extract vanilla; spread this 
on the top of the pie and let it harden for a 
moment in the oven. Or you may prepare it 
in still another way. Put the chocolate in a 
basin on the back of the stove, and let it melt 
(do not put a drop of water with it) ; when 
melted beat 1 egg and some sugar in with it. 
In the latter case it will be a regular chocolate 
brown in color, and in the other a sort of gray. 

Mince Pie. — Paste, 3, 2 cups mince-meat. 

Mince=meat. — 7 pounds currants, 3 M2 pounds 
peeled and cored apples, 3Mi pounds beef, 3Mi 
pounds suet, Mi pound each citron, lemon, and 
orange peel, 2Mi pounds coffee sugar, 2 pounds 
raisins, 4 nutmegs, 1 ounce cinnamon, Mi ounce 
each cloves and mace, 1 pint brandy, and 1 
pint white wine. Wash currants, dry, pick 
them; stone the raisins; remove skin and 
sinews from beef and suet. Chop each ingre- 



bars across; fasten at edge, then 3 more dient, separately, very fine ; put into large pan 
across, forming diamond-shaped spaces. Lay as they are finished, finally adding spices, 
rim of paste, 5, or of same; wash with egg brandy, and wine; thoroughly mix together; 
wash ; bake in quick oven until paste is cooked. | pack in jars ; store in cold, dry plaoe. This 

THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



29 



mince-meat will keep from 12 to 18 months. 
The fruit should never be floured in making 
mince pie. 

Mince-meat, i. — 2 pounds currants, 5 
pounds peeled and cored apples, 2 pounds lean 
boiled beef, 1 pound beef suet, 3 4 pound citron, 
2Mt pounds coffee sugar, 2 pounds raisins. 1 
pound seedless raisins, 2 tablespoons cinna- 
mon, 1 nutmeg, 1 tablespoon each mace, 
cloves, and allspice, 1 pint each Madeira wine 
and brandy. Wash currants, dry, pick them ; 
stone the raisins; remove skin and sinews 
from the beef. Chop each ingredient up, 
separately, very fine ; place as soon as done 
in large pan, finally adding spices, Madeira, 
and brandy ; mix thoroughly ; pack in jars ; 
keep in cold place. 

Peach Tart. — For each large peach allow 
1 tablespoon sugar and 1 tablespoon water. 
Fill baking-dish with sliced peaches, add sugar 
and water. Cover with pie crust, 6, bake in 
moderate oven about 30 minutes. Serve hot 
with cream. 

Plum Pie. — Paste, 5, 3 cups plums ; simmer 
in water, cover with \Mi cups sugar, until ten- 
der. Line pie-plate with the paste ; wet edges ; 
cover ; wash with egg ; bake in quick oven 20 
minutes. 

Pumpkin or Squash Pie. — Use pie crust, 4 
or 6. Mix 3 cups thick stewed and sieved 
pumpkin or squash, 2 cups milk, 1 cup sugar, 
1 teaspoon salt, 2 eggs, Mt teaspoon cinnamon, 
pinch cloves. Line 2 pie-plates as for custard 
pie ; bake in moderate oven. 

Rhubarb Pie. — Paste, 4, \Mi bunches rhu- 
barb, \Mi cups sugar. Cut fruit in small pieces 
after stripping off skin, cook it very fast in 
shallow stewpan, with sugar. Line pie-plate 
with the paste ; wet rim ; add rhubarb, cold ; 
lay 3 bars paste across, fastening ends ; lay 3 
more across, forming diamond-shaped spaces ; 
lay round a rim, wash over with egg, and bake 
in quick oven 15 minutes. 

Tarts : Gooseberry, Currant, Apple, or 
any other Fruit.— Time to bake, from % to 1 
hour. 1 quart gooseberries, rather more than 
Mt pound paste, moist sugar to taste. Cut off 
tops and tails from gooseberries, or pick cur- 
rants from their stems, or pare and quarter the 
apples or peaches ; put them into pie-dish with 
sugar, line edge of dish with paste, pour in a 
little water, put on cover, ornament edge of 
paste in the usual manner, and bake it in a 
brisk oven. 

Tartlets. — Time to bake, V* hour. Line 
some patty-pans with puff paste, fill them with 
any jam or preserve, and bake lightly. 

Open Jam Tart. — Time to bake, until paste 
loosens from the dish. Line shallow tin dish 
with puff paste, put in the jam, roll out some 
of paste, wet it lightly with yolk of an egg 
beaten with a little milk and a tablespoon of 
powdered sugar ; cut it in very narrow strips, 
then lay them across the tart ; lay another strip 
round the edge, trim off outside, and bake in 
quick oven. 



Other Desserts 

BAKED CUSTARDS.— For each quart 
milk allow 4 large or 5 small eggs and 
3 tablespoons sugar. Warm milk ; pour 
over eggs and sugar beaten together. Fill 
small earthen cups or pudding-dish. Stand in 
pan of warm water ; add flavoring to suit, and 
bake in moderate oven till firm in center. For 
chocolate custards melt chocolate with sugar. 

Corn-starch Custard.— Scald 1 quart milk. 
Dissolve 2 level teaspoons corn-starch in little 
cold milk. Turn quickly into hot milk ; stir 
till thickened, then cover and cook 10 minutes. 
Beat 2 eggs with 3 tablespoons sugar, add to 
custard, stir a moment longer, strain. Add 
flavoring when partly cooled. 

Tapioca Custard.— Put 2 tablespoons fine 
tapioca in double boiler with 1 pint milk, cook 
and stir till tapioca is transparent. Add yolks 
2 eggs beaten with 3 tablespoons sugar, and 
pinch salt; stir till thickened. Add whites 
whipped to stiff froth, stir lightly 3 minutes ; 
take from fire ; add flavoring when cooled. If 
pearl or lump tapioca is used, it must be 
soaked in cold water for several hours before 
cooking. 

Apple Snow. — Core, quarter, and steam 3 
large, sour apples. Rub through sieve, cool ; 
whip whites 3 eggs to very stiff froth with Mi 
cup powdered sugar, gradually add apple, and 
whip long time till white and stiff. Pile in 
dish, garnish with dots currant jelly. 

Snow Eggs. — To whites 5 eggs add pinch 
salt, and whip to very stiff froth ; gradually 
add 1 tablespoon powdered sugar and few 
drops flavoring. Scald 1 quart milk in large 
pan. Shape whites in tablespoon, drop a few 
at a time in hot milk. Turn until cooked. 
Lift out with skimmer, lay on glass dish. 
When all are cooked make custard with egg 
yolks, milk, and 3 tablespoons sugar, and serve 
with eggs. 

Charlotte Russe. — Mix 1 pint rich cream, 
Mt cup powdered sugar, 1 teaspoon vanilla. 
Have very cold and whip to stiff froth, turning 
under cream when it first rises. Line dish 
with sponge cake or ladyfingers, fill with 
whipped cream. 

Chocolate Blanc-mange. — Quart milk, "6 
box gelatine soaked in 1 cup water, 4 table- 
spoons grated chocolate rubbed smooth in a 
little milk, 3 eggs, extract; vanilla to taste. 
Heat milk until boiling, then add other ingre- 
dients ; boil 5 minutes. Pour into mold. 
Serve cold with sugar and cream, or custard. 

Iced Fruits for Desserts. — Any desirable 
fruit may be easily iced by dipping first in the 
beaten white of an egg, then in sugar finely 
pulverized, and again in egg, and so on until 
you have the icing of the desired thickness. 
For this purpose oranges or lemons should be 
carefully pared, and all the white inner skin 
removed that is possible, to prevent bitterness ; 
then cut either in thin horizontal slices if 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



30 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



lemons, or in quarters if oranges. For cherries, 
strawberries, currants, etc., choose the largest 
and finest, leaving stems out. Peaches should 
be pared and cut in halves, and sweet, juicy 
pears may be treated in the same way, or look 
nice when pared, leaving on the stems, and 
iced. Pineapples should be cut in thin slices, 
and these again divided into quarters. 

Floating Island.— 1 quart milk, 4 eggs, 
yolks and whites beaten separately, 4 table- 
spoons sugar, 2 teaspoons extract vanilla or 
bitter almonds, Vi cup currant jelly. Heat 
milk to scalding, but not boiling. Beat the 
yolks ; stir into them the sugar, and pour upon 
them gradually, mixing well, a cup of the hot 
milk. Put into saucepan and boil until it 
begins to thicken. When cool, flavor and 
pour into a glass dish. Heap upon top me- 
ringue of whites whipped until you can cut it, 
into which you have beaten the jelly, a tea- 
spoon at a time. 



Frozen Desserts 

HOW TO FREEZE.— Pound ice to bits 
size of hickory nut. Use salt in lumps 
tyj size of a pea. Allow 1 part salt to 3 
parts ice. Mix together in pail. In bottom of 
freezer put 1 inch layer of mixture, and pack. 
Arrange and fasten can in freezer. Fill up 
space between with the mixture, packing hard. 
Turn can occasionally to make sure it will 
run freely. When ice is within 1 inch of top 
of can open and fill can, replace and fasten top. 
Turn slowly at first. Increase speed, adding 
more ice and salt as mixture sinks. When 
cream is very firm open can, draw out dasher, 
work cream down in can with wooden spoon, 
cover top with paper, then with can cover, add 
more ice and salt, heaping it over top of can. 
Cover with heavy blanket, set away in cold 
place for 2 hours. 

Plain Ice Cream. — Scald 1 pint milk ; mix 1 
cup sugar with 2 tablespoons flour, pinch salt, 
and 2 beaten eggs. Add to hot milk, stir over 
fire till thick and smooth, cover and cook 20 
minutes. Strain and cool. Add 1 pint cream, fla- 
voring desired, and freeze. One can condensed 
milk and 1 cup milk may be mixed and added 
in place of cream. Very good ice cream may 
be made without the addition of any cream. 

Philadelphia Ice Cream.— Scald 1 pint 
cream. Add 1 cup sugar and stir till dissolved. 
Take from fire and add 1 pint chilled cream. 
Freeze when cold. 

Delmonico Ice Cream. — Make a cooked 
custard with 1 pint milk, 5 eggs, 1 cup sugar ; 
strain and cool. Add 1 pint rich cream, 2 
tablespoons flavoring, and freeze. 

To this as well as to any cream may be added 
at will 1 cup fresh fruit or berries rubbed 
through sieve, Vi cup cake crumbs, or any 
variety flavorings and colorings desired. 

Water Ices.— Boil 1 quart water and 1 pint 
sugar 5 minutes. Add V% box gelatine soaked 
in cold water, stir till dissolved and chill. Add 
1 cup lemon juice and freeze. 

All water ices are made in this way, varying 
the proportion of sugar according to the acidity 
of the fruit used. Canned fruit syrups may be 
substituted for fresh fruit juice. 



Biscuit Glace.— IMi pints cream, 12 ounces 
sugar, yolks of 8 eggs, and 1 tablespoon extract 
vanilla. Take 6 ounces crisp macaroons, pound 
in mortar to dust. Mix cream, sugar, eggs, 
and extract. Place on fire, and stir composi- 
tion until it begins to thicken. Strain and 
rub through hair-sieve into basin. Put into 
freezer ; when nearly frozen, mix in macaroon 
dust, another tablespoon extract vanilla, and 
finish freezing. 

Chocolate Ice Cream.— 3 pints best cream, 
12 ounces pulverized white sugar, 4 whole 
eggs, 1 tablespoon extract vanilla, 1 pint rich 
cream whipped, 6 ounces chocolate. Dissolve 
chocolate in small quantity of milk to smooth 
paste. Now mix with cream, sugar, eggs, and 
extract. Place all on fire, stir until it begins to 
thicken. Strain through hair-sieve. Place in 
freezer ; when nearly frozen, stir in lightly the 
whipped cream, and 1 tablespoon extract va- 
nilla, and finish freezing. 

Crushed Strawberry Ice Cream.— 3 pints 
best cream, 12 ounces pulverized white sugar, 
2 whole eggs. Mix all in porcelain-lined ba- 
sin ; place on fire ; stir constantly to boiling 
point. Remove and strain through hair-sieve. 
Place in freezer and freeze. Take 1 quart ripe 
strawberries, select, hull, and put in a china 
bowl. Add 6 ounces pulverized white sugar, 
crush all down to pulp. Add this pulp to frozen 
cream, with 2 tablespoons extract vanilla; mix 
in well. Now give freezer few additional turns 
to harden. 

Orange Water Ice. — Juice 6 oranges, 2 tea- 
spoons extract orange, juice 1 lemon, 1 quart 
water, 1 pound powdered sugar, 1 gill rich, 
sweet cream ; add all together and strain. 
Freeze same as ice cream. 

Peach Ice Cream. — One dozen of best and 
ripest red-cheeked peaches ; peel and stone ; 
place in china basin, crush with 6 ounces pul- 
verized sugar. Now take 1 quart best cream, 
8 ounces pulverized white sugar, 2 whole eggs. 
Place all on fire until it reaches boiling point ; 
now remove and strain ; place in freezer and 
freeze. When nearly frozen stir in peach pulp, 
with teaspoon extract almonds ; give few more 
turns of freezer to harden. 

Raspberry Water Ice. — Press sufficient 
raspberries through hair-sieve to give 3 pints 
juice. Add 1 pound pulverized white sugar 
and juice of 1 lemon, with 1 teaspoon extract 
raspberry. Place in freezer and freeze. 



Canning and Preserving 

CANNING. — The important points to be 
observed in canning are, to use only 
sound, ripe fruit ; to have hot syrup and 
air-tight jars; to fill jars to overflowing and 
seal immediately. Jars should be scalded and 
tested before using. Patent canners greatly 
simplify the work. 

Pick over the fruit, stem, pare, cut, wash, 
etc., and pack in jars. Make syrup by adding 
% pint boiling water to 1 pound sugar. When 
clear, bring to boiling point and carefully fill 
the jars. Stand in canner or on board in wash- 
boiler containing water up to shoulders of 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



31 



Canned 






Preserved 


. . 4 oz 8 oz. 




8 " 








12 " 




. 4 " 








6 " 




6 " 








9 " 




8 " 








12 " 




4 " 








8 " 




4 " 








8 " 




4 " 








8 " 




8 " 








12 " 




6 " 








10 " 




G " 








9 " 




8 " 








12 " 




6 " 








9 " 




8 " 








12 " 




8 " 








12 " 



jars. Cover and cook according to directions 
or till tender. Take from canner or boiler, add 
more syrup till overflowing, cover and seal 
immediately. 

Amount of Sugar per Quart Jar 

Cherries . , 
Strawberries 
Raspberries 
Blackberries 
Quinces . . 
Pears . . . 
Grapes . . 
Peaches . , 
Pineapples . 
Crab-apples . 
Plums . . 
Rhubarb . . 
Sour apples . 
Currants . . 
Cranberries . 

Preserving. — Preserves require from 34 to 
1 pound of sugar to each pound of fruit, and 
Mi cup water to each pound sugar. The fruit 
should be simmered in the syrup until tender, 
a little at a time ; skimmed out into the jars ; 
when all are done the syrup should be brought 
to boiling point, jars filled and sealed. Hard 
fruits like quinces should be first steamed or 
cooked in boiling water till tender. 

Jams. — Jams are xisually made with small 
fruits or with chopped large fruits ; they are 
cooked with an equal weight of sugar till rich 
and thick, then put into tumblers or small 
jars and sealed. 

Jellies. — Use equal parts of sugar and 
drained fruit juice. Mash and heat berries 
till juice runs readily, then turn into bags of 
unbleached muslin or 2 thicknesses of cheese- 
cloth and let drip. Measure juice and sugar. 
Boil juice 20 minutes. Have sugar in shallow 
pan, heat through in open oven. Add to boil- 
ing juice, boil up once, take off fire and pour 
into tumblers. Fruit like apples and quinces 
should be chopped and covered with water, 
then simmered till tender before turning into 
jelly-bags. 

Spiced Fruits. — These are also called sweet 
pickled fruits. For 4 pounds prepared fruit 
allow 1 pint vinegar, 2 pounds brown sugar, 
Mi cup whole spices — cloves, allspice, stick cin- 
namon, and cassia-buds. Tie spices in thin 
muslin bag, boil 10 minutes with vinegar and 
sugar. Skim, add fruit, cook till tender. Boil 
down syrup, pour over fruit in jars, and seal. 
If put in stone pots, boil syrup 3 successive 
mornings and pour over fruit. Currants, 
peaches, grapes, pears, and berries may be 
prepared in this way, also ripe cucumbers, 
muskmelons, and watermelon rind. 



Soups 



SOUP STOCK is made from cheap, tough 
cuts. The meat should be cut in small 
pieces and soaked in cold water for 
half an hour to draw out the juices. Bone is 
added for the sake of the gelatine which it con- 
tains, and which will give body to the soup. A 
good proportion is 1 pound each of meat and 



bone to each quart of water. Use a kettle with 
a very tight cover and simmer slowly for a 
number of hours. Stock is better when made 
the day before it is to be used. 

Soup Stock. — 1 pound lean beef, 1 pound 
bone (or 2 pounds of shin), 1 quart cold water, 
1 teaspoon salt, Mi teaspoon peppercorns, 2 
cloves, 2 allspice berries, 1 sprig parsley, 1 tea- 
spoon mixed herbs, 1 tablespoon each kind 
chopped vegetable. Prepare meat as above, 
soak in water Mt hour, heat slowly and simmer 
3 hours, add vegetables and seasonings, sim- 
mer 1 hour longer, and strain. Next day re- 
move cake of fat. 

To clear stock beat white 1 egg till frothy, 
add with broken shell to above stock when 
cold (after fat is removed) ; heat slowly and 
stir constantly. Boil 10 minutes without stir- 
ring ; set aside 10 minutes ; strain through 2 
thicknesses cheesecloth dipped in cold water. 

Soups with Pastes or Vegetables. — Pre- 
pare and clear stock as above. In salted water 
boil macaroni, vermicelli, barley, rice, tapioca, 
or other vegetables or dry material until done ; 
drain and add to the clear soup and simmer to- 
gether 10 minutes. Proportion, Mi cup cooked 
material to 1 quart stock. Vegetables should 
be boiled in salted water, cut in shapes, and 
added to stock in same proportion. 

Tomato Soup with Stock. — 1 quart stock, 
1 can tomatoes, salt, pepper, and sugar to taste. 
Stew and strain tomatoes ; add to boiling stock, 
season, and simmer 10 minutes. 

Tomato Soup without Stock. — Stew to- 
gether for 10 minutes 1 can tomatoes, 1 pint 
water, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 tablespoon sugar, 5 
cloves, Mi teaspoon peppercorns, 1 tablespoon 
chopped onion, 1 tablespoon chopped parsley. 
Rub through sieve, return to fire, and thicken 
with 1 tablespoon butter and 1 tablespoon flour 
rubbed together and stirred in. 

Mock Bisque Soup. — Mi can tomatoes, \Mi 
tablespoons butter, lMi tablespoons flour, 1 
quart milk, salt and pepper. Stew and strain 
tomatoes; scald milk in double boiler and 
thicken with the flour and butter ; season to- 
matoes well and reheat. Take both from fire 
and mix together ; if tomatoes are acid add 
pinch of soda. If mixed on fire soup is apt to 
curdle. 

Scotch Broth.— Soak Mi cup pearl barley 
overnight. Cut 2 pounds neck of mutton in 
bits, add 2 quarts water, soak 1 hour. Heat 
slowly, skim, add barley, skim again; simmer 
1 hour, add Mi cup each diced onion, carrot, 
turnip, celery fried for 5 minutes in 1 table- 
spoon dripping. Simmer 3 hours. Season 
well, thicken a little with flour, add 1 table- 
spoon chopped parsley, and serve. 

Consomme.— 1 chicken, 3 pounds lean beef , 
1 onion, 1 turnip, 2 carrots, bunch sweet herbs, 
7 quarts cold water, Mi cup sago soaked in cold 
water, pepper and salt. Cut beef in strips and 
disjoint chicken, slice vegetables, chop herbs, 
put all on with water to cook slowly for 6 hours. 
Take out chicken and beef; salt and pepper 
and put into jar. Strain soup, pulping vegeta- 
bles through a sieve. Season and divide it, 
pouring Mi on meat in jar, and setting in pot 
of hot water to cook, covered, 2 hours more. 
Heat the rest and skim ; put in sago, simmer 
for Mi hour, then pour out. When 2 hours 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



32 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



have passed, pour out stock in bowl; when 
cold put on ice. 

Bean Soup. — Soak quart white beans over- 
night ; in morning pour off water ; add fresh, 
and set over fire until skins will easily slip off ; 
throw them into cold water, rub well, and 
skins will rise to top, where they may be re- 
moved. Boil beans till perfectly soft, allowing 
2 quarts water to 1 quart beans ; mash beans, 
add flour and .butter rubbed together, also salt 
and pepper. Cut cold bread into small pieces, 
toast, and drop on soup when you serve. 

Family Soup. — Time, 6 hours; 3 or 4 quarts 
pot liquor, i. e., the water in which mutton or 
salt beef has been boiled. Any bones from 
dressed meat, trimmings of poultry, scraps of 
meat or 1 pound gravy beef, 2 large onions, 1 
turnip, 2 carrots, a little celery seed tied in a j 
piece muslin, bunch savory herbs, 1 sprig pars- 
ley, 5 cloves, 2 blades mace, a few peppercorns, 
pepper and salt to taste. Put all your meat- 
trimmings, meat-bones, etc., into stewpan. 
Stick onions with cloves, add them with other 
vegetables to meat; pour over all the pot liq- 
uor ; set over slow fire and let simmer gently, 
removing all scum as it rises. Strain through 
fine hair-sieve 

Clam Soup. — Boil juice of clams, make a 
little drawn butter and mix with the juice ; stir 
till it boils, chop up clams and put them in ; 
season to taste with pepper, salt, and little 
lemon juice ; cream or milk is to be added. Boil 
over slow fire 1 hour. 

Soups of Dried Pea's or Beans.— Pick and 
soak split peas, dried green peas, or black or 
white beans overnight. Drain, measure, add 
4 times as much cold water ; to each quart of 
water, % onion. Simmer slowly till soft. Rub 
through sieve. Return to fire, season with 
salt and pepper ; for each quart thicken with 1 
teaspoon each butter and flour. Boil up again 
for a few minutes. Black bean soup should 
also have a pinch of mustard and a little lemon 
juice added, and slices of hard-boiled egg. 

Croutons. — Trim crust from stale bread and 
cut in ^-inch dice. Fry golden brown in a 
little butter or in a kettle of smoking-hot fat. 
Drain and serve hot with soups. Instead of 
frying they may be browned in the oven. 

Ox=tail Soup. — 1 ox-tail, 2 pounds lean beef, 
4 carrots, 3 onions, thyme and parsley, pepper 
and salt to taste, 4 quarts cold water. Cut tail 
into joints, fry brown in good dripping. Slice 
onions and 2 carrots and fry in the same, when 
you have taken out the pieces of tail. When 
done tie the thyme and parsley in lace bag, 
and drop into the soup-pot. Put in the tail, 
then the beef cut into strips. Grate over 
them 2 whole carrots, pour over all the water, 
and boil slowly 4 hours ; strain and season ; 
thicken with brown flour wet with cold water ; 
boil 15 minutes longer and serve. 



Fish 



DIRECTIONS FOR PREPARING.— Clean 
fish carefully, slit it low enough so as 
not to have any blood on the backbone, 
but do not make too large a cut so as to spoil 
look of fish ; wash thoroughly in cold water. 

THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE 



Great care must be taken not to break gall, for 
it would make fish bitter. Use good dripping 
or lard for frying. 

To Broil Fish. — Clean, wash, and wipe dry. 
Split so that when laid flat the backbone will 
be in the middle, or take the backbone out. 
Sprinkle with salt and lay, inside down, upon 
a buttered gridiron over a clear fire until it is 
nicely colored, then turn. When done, put 
upon a hot dish, butter plentifully, and pepper. 
Put a hot cover over it and send to table. 

Boiled Bass, or other Fish. — Put sufficient 
water in pot to enable fish, if alive, to swim 
easily. Add Vz cup vinegar, 1 teaspoon salt, 
1 onion, 1 dozen whole black peppers, 1 blade 
mace. Sew up fish in piece of clean net or 
muslin, fitted to shape. Heat slowly for first 
Vi hour; then boil 8 minutes, at least, to 
pound, quite fast. Unwrap, and pour over it 
cup of drawn butter, based upon the liquor in 
which fish was boiled, with juice of V2 lemon 
stirred into it. 

Creamed Fish. — Steam 2 pounds codfish, 
break in flakes, removing bones and skin. 
Make 1 pint white sauce (see Meat and Fish 
Sauces). Grease a baking-dish, fill with alter- 
nate layers of fish and sauce, seasoning with 
salt, pepper, chopped parsley, and lemon juice 
or a few drops of vinegar. Mix together 1 cup 
dry bread crumbs and 3 tablespoons melted 
butter; spread over top and brown in quick 
oven. 

This may be varied by using tomato, becha- 
mel, curry, or any other sauce, or by adding 
grated cheese or sliced hard-boiled eggs to the 
white sauce ; by baking in shells or patty-pans 
in place of the deep dish, or by covering with 
mashed potato or biscuit crust instead of 
crumbs. 

Broiled Salt Mackerel.— Freshen by soak- 
ing it overnight in water, taking care that the 
skin lies uppermost. In the morning dry it 
without breaking, cut off the head and tip of 
the tail, place it between the bars of a buttered 
fish-gridiron, and broil to a light brown ; lay it 
on a hot dish, and dress with a little butter, 
pepper, and lemon juice, vinegar, or chopped 
pickle. 

Broiled Halibut.— Slices of halibut, salt, 
pepper, butter. Cut the slices of fish about an 
inch thick, season with pepper and salt, and 
lay them in melted butter % hour, allowing 3 
tablespoons of butter to a pound of fish, then 
roll them in flour, and broil about 20 minutes. 
Serve very hot. 

Codfish Balls. — Put fish in cold water, set 
on back of stove ; when water gets hot, pour 
off and put on cold again until fish is fresh 
enough; then pick it up. Boil potatoes and 
mash them; mix fish and potatoes together 
while potatoes are hot, taking % potatoes and 
Mj fish. Put in plenty of butter; make into 
balls and fry in plenty of lard. Have lard hot 
before putting in balls. 

Variation may be had by rolhng each ball 
in beaten egg, then in dry bread crumbs be- 
fore frying. 

Fried Blue Fish, and other Kinds.— Clean, 
wipe dry, inside and out. Sprinkle with flour, 
and season with salt. Fry in hot butter or 
sweet lard. % lard and V<j butter make a good 
mixture for frying fish. The moment fish are 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



33 



done to good brown, take them from fat and 
drain in hot strainer ; garnish with parsley. 

Fish Chowder. — Cut 2 or 3 slices of salt pork 
into dice pieces; fry to crisp, and turn the 
whole into chowder-kettle. Pare 6 medium- 
sized potatoes and cut them,in two. Peel small 
onion and chop fine. Put potatoes into kettle 
with part of onion. Cut fish (which should he 
fresh cod or haddock) into convenient pieces, 
and lay over potatoes ; sprinkle over it rest of 
the onion. Season well with salt and pepper, 
add just enough water to come to top of fish. 
Pour over the whole quart can tomatoes ; 
cover closely and allow to cook about as long 
as takes to boil potatoes; then add 2 quarts 
milk, and let it scald up again. Season with 
tomato catsup, and more salt and pepper if 
required. 

To Fry Brook Trout or any other Small 
Fish. — Clean fish, and let them lie few minutes 
wrapped singly in clean dry towel; season 
with pepper and salt ; roll in corn meal, fry in 
Vs butter and % lard; drain on sieve, and 
serve hot. 



Shell Fish 

CLAM CHOWDER.— 25 clams cut up, Mi 
pound salt pork chopped fine, 6 potatoes 
sliced thin, 4 onions sliced thin. Put 
pork in kettle ; after cooking a short time add 
potatoes, onions, and juice of clams. Cook 
2V-2 hours, then add clams ; 15 minutes before 
serving add 2 quarts milk. 

Fried Oysters. — Select largest and finest 
oysters. Drain and wipe them by spread- 
ing upon cloth, laying another over them, 
pressing lightly. Roll each in beaten egg, 
then in cracker crumbs with which has been 
mixed a very little pepper. Fry in mixture of 
equal parts of lard and butter. 

Oysters Roasted in the Shell.— Wash and 

scrub the shells. Cook in hot oven, on top of 
stove, over red-hot coals, or in steamer until 
shells open. Always place them round shell 
down to retain juice. Serve melted butter and 
vinegar or lemons with them. 

Panned Oysters. — Pick over the opened 
oysters to remove bits of shell. Wash quickly 
in cold water and drain on sieve. Put into 
saucepan with 1 tablespoon butter for 25 oys- 
ters and a dash of salt and pepper. Cover 
and shake over a hot fire until edges ruffle 
and oysters are plump. May be served on toast. 

Stewed Oysters. — Pick over and wash 1 
quart oysters. Scald 1 pint milk. Strain, boil, 
and skim oyster liquor ; when clear add oysters. 
Cook till oysters are plump and well ruffled ; 
take from fire, add hot milk, salt, and pepper. 

If desired thicker, rub together 1 tablespoon 
each of butter and flour ; add to milk and stir 
until smooth. This may be varied by addition 
of a little chopped celery or onion. 

Creamed Oysters.— Prepare 1 cup thick 
cream sauce (see Sauces). Pan 1 pint cleaned 
eysters ; drain and add to sauce. Season with 
salt, pepper, pinch of mace, and few drops 
lemon juice. 

Scalloped Oysters. — Pick, wash, and drain 
1 solid quart oysters. Put in layers in baking- 



dish, alternating with dry bread or cracker 
crumbs and seasoning. When dish is filled add 
strained oyster liquor and sufficient milk to 
moisten. Cover with crumbs, add 1 tablespoon 
butter in bits, and bake Mt hour in hot oven. 

Broiled Oysters.— Pick, wash, and drain 
large oysters. Dip each in melted butter, roll 
in fine crumbs, and broil in fine wire broiler 
over a clear, hot fire. Serve on toast with 
sliced lemons. 

Pickled Oysters.— 2 gallons large oysters, 
drain and rinse them ; put 1 pint oyster juice 
in 1 quart vinegar over fire ; scald and skim 
until clear ; add I tablespoon whole pepper, 1 
tablespoon cloves, 1 tablespoon mace, 1 even 
tablespoon salt ; scald a minute, then throw in 
oysters ; let them just come to a boil. The 
oysters should be pickled day before being 
wanted, as they grow tough after standing a 
few days in vinegar. 

Oyster Pates. — 1 quart oysters, minced fine 
with a sharp knife ; 1 cup rich drawn butter 
based upon milk ; cayenne and black pepper to 
taste. Stir minced oysters in drawn butter 
and cook 5 minutes. Have ready some shapes 
of pastry, baked in pate^pans, then slipped out. 
Fill these with the mixture ; set in oven 2 min- 
utes to heat, and send to table. 

Oyster Pie. — 1 quart oysters, drained ; pep- 
per, salt, and butter to taste. 1 quart flour, 2 
tablespoons lard, 1 tablespoon salt, mix with 
water for pie crust. Butter plate, then bine 
pie plate with crust ; fill with oysters, seasoned ; 
put over a crust and bake. 

Scallops in Batter. — Wash and dry large 
scallops. Dip each in fritter batter (see Frit- 
ters) and fry golden brown in smoking-hot fat. 

To Boil Lobsters or Crabs.— The lobster is 
in good season from April to December, and 
should be purchased alive and plunged into 
boiling water in which a good proportion of 
salt has been mixed. Continue to boil accord- 
ing to size about 20 minutes. Crabs should be 
boiled in the same manner, but a little more 
than half the time is necessary. 

Deviled Crabs. — 1 cup crab meat, picked 
from shells of well-boiled crabs, 2 tablespoons 
fine bread crumbs or rolled cracker, yolks two 
hard-boiled eggs chopped, juice of a lemon, Mt 
teaspoon mustard, a little cayenne pepper and 
salt, 1 cup good drawn butter. Mix 1 spoon 
crumbs with chopped crab meat, yolks, season- 
ing, drawn butter. Fill scallop shells — large 
clam shells will do — or small pat^-pans — with 
the mixture ; sift crumbs over top, heat to 
slight browning in quick oven. 

Soft Shell Crabs.— Fry in butter or lard. 

To Open a Boiled Lobster.— Wipe off shell, 
break off large claws ; separate tail from body ; 
take body from shell, leaving " lady," or 
stomach, on shell. Put aside green fat and coral ; 
remove small claws ; remove woolly gills from 
body, break latter through middle, and pick out 
meat from joints. Crush or cut under side of 
tail, draw meat from shell. Draw back flesh 
on upper end and pull off intestinal cord. 
Break edge of large claws and remove meat. 

Lobster Newburg. — Season 1 pint diced 
lobster with Mt teaspoon salt, dash cayenne, 
pinch nutmeg. Put in saucepan with 2 table- 
spoons butter, heat slowly. Add 2 tablespoons 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



L.ofC. 



34 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



sherry ; cook 5 minutes ; add Mt cup cream 
beaten with yolks 2 eggs, stir till thickened. 
Take quickly from fire. 



Meats 

Broiling 

THE rules for roasting meat apply to broil- 
ing, except that instead of cooking it in 
the oven it is to be quickly browned, 
first on one side and then on the other, over a 
hot fire, and removed a little from the fire to 
finish cooking. Meat an inch thick will broil 
in about 4 minutes. It should be seasoned 
after it is cooked. 

Frying 
There are two distinct methods of frying: 
One with very little fat in the pan, to practise 
which successfully the pan and the fat must 
be hot before the article to be fried is put into 
it. For instance, in frying chops, if the pan 
is hot, and only fat enough is used to keep the 
chops from sticking to it, the heat being main- 
tained so that the chops cook quickly, they 
will be nearly as nice as if they were broiled. 
Frying by the other method consists in entirely 
immersing the article to be cooked in sufficient 
smoking-hot fat to cover it, and keeping the 
fat at that degree of heat until the food is 
brown. It should then be taken up with a 
skimmer and laid upon brown paper for a mo- 
ment to free it from grease. 

Boiling and Stewing 

Fresh meat for boiling should be put into 
boiling water and boiled very gently about 20 
minutes for each pound. A little salt, spice, 
or vegetables may be boiled in the water with 
the meat for seasoning. A little vinegar put 
in the water with tough meat makes it tender. 
The broth of boiled meat should always be 
saved to use in soups, stews, and gravies. 
Stewing and simmering meats means to place 
them near enough to the fire to keep the water 
on them bubbling moderately, constantly, and 
slowly. Salt meats should be put over the fire 
in cold water, which as soon as it boils should 
be replaced by fresh cold water, the water to 
be changed until it remains fresh enough to 
give the meat a palatable flavor when done. 
Salted and smoked meats require about 30 
minutes' very slow boiling, from the time the 
water boils, to each pound. Vegetables and 
herbs may be boiled with them to flavor them. 
When they are cooked the vessel containing 
them should be set where they will keep hot 
without boiling until required, if they are to 
be served hot ; if they are to be served cold, 
they should be allowed to cool in the pot liq- 
uor in which they were boiled. Very salt meats, 
or those much dried in smoking, 'should be 



Roasting 

Wipe meat with damp cloth. Trim and tie 
into shape if necessary. In the bottom of pan 
put some pieces of fat from meat. Arrange 
meat on rack in pan. Dredge with salt, pep- 
per, and flour. Have oven very hot at first ; 
when meat is half done reduce heat. Baste 
every 10 or 15 minutes. If there is danger 
of fat in pan being scorched add a few spoons 
of boiling water. Allow from 10 to 20 minutes 
per pound of meat, according as it is desired 
rare or well done. When done remove to hot 
platter. Thicken gravy in pan with browned 
flour, adding more water as necessary and add 
seasoning. 

Yorkshire Pudding. — 34 pint flour, 3 eggs, 
\V% pints milk, pinch salt, 1% teaspoons Royal 
Baking Powder. Sift flour and powder to- 
gether, add eggs, beaten with milk, stir quickly 
into rather thinner batter than for griddle 
cakes, pour into dripping-pan, plentifully 
greased with beef-dripping, bake in hot oven 
25 minutes ; serve with roast beef. 

Braised Beef. — Wipe and trim 6 pounds 
round or rump of beef without bone. Sear 
brown on all sides in very hot frying-pan over 
hot fire. In braising-pan or iron kettle put 
layers of sliced onions, turnips, and carrots ; 
add bunch of sweet herbs, 1 teaspoon salt, % 
teaspoon pepper ; on this lay meat. Add 1 pint 
boiling water (or water and stewed tomatoes). 
Cover closely and cook 4 hours in moderate 
oven. If water evaporates rapidly add more. 
Transfer meat to hot platter. Strain, thicken, 
and season gravy. The vegetables may be 
served separately if desired. 

Braised Veal Shoulder. — Have shoulder 
boned. Fill with stuffing (see Stuffings). Pre- 
pare bed of vegetables as for braised beef. 
Lay veal on it, add 1 pint boning water, 1 pint 
stewed tomatoes, M> teaspoon salt, V4 teaspoon 
pepper. Cover and cook 4 hours in moderate 
oven. Uncover and brown. Serve strained 
gravy separately. 

Broiled Steak. — Trim and wipe steak, which 
should be at least 1 inch thick. Rub broiler 
with fat, arrange steak with thickest part in 
center of broiler. Have fire clear and very 
hot, but without blaze. Hold steak close to fire. 
Turn every V2 minute, that it may sear quickly. 
When Mj done season with salt and pepper. 
Steak 1 inch thick will broil in 4 minutes. 

Panned Steak or Chops.— Trim and wipe 
steak. Heat frying-pan until it smokes all 
over. Rub bottom with a bit of fat. Lay in 
steak and turn every 10 seconds. Keep pan 
very hot. Season when ^ done. 

Mutton and pork chops, ham and bacon, may 
be panned in same way. , 

If hot platter for steak is rubbed with a cut 
onion it will give a delightful flavor to the meat. 

Broiled Ham and Poached Eggs.— Cut 
slices of boiled ham of equal size ; broil on a 
gridiron over a clear fire ; lay on a hot dish. 
Lay on each a poached egg, neatly trimmed, 
and serve. 

Beefsteak Pie (French style).— Take a 



soaked overnight in cold water before boiling. I nice piece of beef, rump or sirloin, cut in smal 
THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



35 



slices ; slice also a little raw ham ; put both in 
a frying-pan, with some butter and small quan- 
tity chopped onions; let them simmer together 
a short time on the fire or in the oven ; add a 
little flour and enough stock to make sauce ; 
salt, pepper, chopped parsley, and a little Wor- 
cestershire sauce as seasoning ; add also a few 
sliced potatoes, and cook together for about 20 
minutes; put this into a pie-dish, with a few 
slices of hard-boiled eggs on the top, and cover 
with a layer of common paste. Bake from 15 
to 20 minutes in a well-heated oven. All dark- 
meat pies can be treated precisely in the same 
way. If poultry, leave the potatoes out. 

To Boil a Ham. — A blade of mace, a few 
cloves, a sprig of thyme, and 2 bay-leaves. Well 
soak ham in large quantity of water for 24 
hours, then trim and scrape very clean ; put 
into large stewpan, with more than sufficient 
water to cover it ; put in mace, cloves, thyme, 
and bay-leaves. Boil 4 or 5 hours, according 
to weight ; when done, let it become cold in 
liquor in which it was boiled. Then remove 
rind carefully, without injuring the fat ; press 
cloth over it to absorb as much of the grease 
as possible. It is always improved by setting 
in the oven for nearly an hour, till much of 
the fat dries out, and it also makes it more 
tender. Shake some bread raspings over the 
fat. Serve cold garnished with parsley. 

Boiled Mutton or Lamb. — Trim and wipe 
the meat. Have ready kettle of rapidly boiling 
salted water. Immerse meat, boil hard 5 min- 
utes, then reduce to gentle simmer. Allow 12 
to 15 minutes per pound. Lamb should always 
be well done ; mutton may be rare. A little 
rice may be added to water to keep meat white ; 
if a few vegetables are also added the pot liquor 
will make a good thick soup. 

Boiled Corned Beef and Turnips.— Select a 
piece not too salt. The brisket is a good cut 
for family use when not too fat. Cook beef in 
plenty cold water. Bring slowly to boil. Cook 
18 minutes to the pound after it begins to sim- 
mer. When fully % done put in a dozen tur- 
nips, peeled and quartered. When both beef 
and turnips are thoroughly done dish out the 
beef, and lay the turnips, unmashed, about it. 
Serve with drawn butter, having as a base the 
pot liquor. Remaining liquor will make a good 
soup for next day's dinner. 

Pork Chops with Tomato Gravy. — Trim 
off skin and fat; rub the chops over with a 
mixture of powdered sage and onion ; put 
small piece butter into a frying-pan ; put in 
the chops and cook slowly, as they should be 
well done. Lay chops on hot dish ; add a little 
hot water to gravy in pan, 1 large spoon 
butter rolled in flour, pepper, salt, and sugar, 
and Mi cup juice drained from can tomatoes. 
The tomatoes themselves can be used for a 
tomato omelet. Stew 5 minutes and pour over 
the chops and serve. 

Sausages. — Have % lean and l k fat pork 
chopped very fine, 1 pound salt, V* pound 
pepper, and teacup sage to every 40 pounds 
meat. Warm the meat, that you can mix it 
well with your hands, do up a part in small 
patties mixed with a little flour, the rest pack 
in jars. When to be used, do it up in small 
cakes, flour the outside, fry in butter or alone. 
They should not be covered while frying, or 
they will fall to pieces. They should be kept 



where it is cool, but not damp. To prevent 
sausages from bursting when cooking, never 
make a hole in them with a fork while turn- 
ing them. 

Fried Salt Pork. — Cut fat salt pork in thin 
slices and soak in milk for a few hours. Pour 
boiling water over, drain, and fry until crisp. 
When partly fried they may be dipped into 
batter (see Fritters), then finished in the same 
pan, turning several times. 

Pork and Beans. — Soak 1 quart white beans 
overnight in cold water. Drain, add fresh 
water, and simmer gently till tender. Put in 
baking-pan and place in center, rind up, gashed, 
Mj pound fat salt pork parboiled. Mix 1 tea- 
spoon salt, Mj teaspoon dry mustard, and 1 table- 
spoon molasses ; add to the beans, with enough 
boiling water to cover. Bake 8 hours in a 
moderate oven, adding more water as necessary. 

Liver and Bacon. — Cut liver in ^-inch 
slices, soak in cold water 20 minutes, drain, 
dry, and roll in flour. Have pan very hot. Put 
in bacon thinly sliced, turn until brown, trans- 
fer to hot platter. Fry liver quickly in the 
hot fat, turning often. When done pour off 
all but 1 or 2 tablespoons fat, dredge in flour 
until it is absorbed, and stir till brown. Add 
hot water gradually to make smooth gravy, 
season and boil 1 minute. Serve separately. 

Few people know that lamb's liver is as ten- 
der and well flavored as calf's liver ; it is much 
less expensive. 

Stew, Irish. — Time, about 2 hours. 2*6 
pounds chops, 8 potatoes, 4 turnips, 4 small 
onions, nearly a quart of water. Take some 
chops from loin of mutton, place them in a 
stewpan in alternate layers of sliced potatoes 
and chops ; add turnips and onions cut into 
pieces, pour in nearly quart cold water ; cover 
stewpan closely, let stew gently till vegetables 
are ready to mash and greater part of gravy is 
absorbed ; then place in a dish ; serve it up 
hot. 

Brown Beef Stew. — Cut 2 pounds beef in 
small pieces. Melt some of the fat in a pan, 
brown in it % the meat. Put rest of meat in 
kettle with 1 pint cold water, let stand 20 min- 
utes, then heat slowly. Transfer browned 
meat to kettle; thicken fat with two table- 
spoons browned flour, add 1 pint boiling water 
and stir ; when thick strain into kettle. Add 
1 cup diced carrot, cover, and simmer. When 
half done add 1 pint diced potatoes. Season 
well with salt and pepper. 

Mutton Haricot.— Cut 2 pounds breast 
mutton in pieces, roll in flour, and brown in 
drippings. Transfer to a stewpan, and 2 sliced 
onions, cover with boiling water, and simmer 
until very tender. Add 1 pint parboiled pota- 
toes or 1 pint boiled macaroni and 1 pint 
shelled peas ; season, simmer till vegetables 
are done. 

Brown Kidney Stew.— From a beef kidney 
cut off the outside meat in bits, rejecting tubes 
and purplish cores. Cover with cold water; 
heat slowly till steaming, drain, add cold water, 
and heat a second and again a third time. To 
the drained kidneys add 1 cup brown sauce 
(see Sauces), season very highly with Worces- 
tershire and catsup, and stand over hot water 
for 10 minutes. 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



36 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



To Roast a Leg of Pork. — Choose a small 
leg of fine young pork ; cut a slit in the knuckle 
with a sharp knife, and fill the space with sage, 
and onions chopped, and a little pepper and 
salt. When half done score the skin in slices, 
but do not cut deeper than the outer rind. 
Apple sauce and potatoes should be served to 
eat with it. 

Sweetbreads. — Scald in salted water ; re- 
move stringy parts ; put in cold water 5 or 10 
minutes ; drain in towel ; dip in egg and bread 
or cracker crumbs, fry in butter, or broil them 
plain. 

Veal Cutlets, Breaded. — Trim and flatten 
the cutlets, pepper and salt, and roll in beaten 
egg, then in pounded cracker. Fry rather 
slewly in good dripping, turning when the 
lower side is brown. Drain off the fat, squeeze 
a little lemon juice upon each, and serve in a 
hot flat dish. 



Stuffings 



VEAL STUFFING.— 3 cups stale bread 
crumbs, 3 onions chopped fine, 1 tea- 
spoon salt, V% teaspoon white pepper, 2 
tablespoons chopped parsley, V2 cup melted 
butter or suet. 

Poultry Stuffing. — 1 quart stale bread 
crumbs, salt, pepper, and dried thyme to 
season highly, Ms cup melted butter. 

Chestnut Stuffing for Poultry. — 1 pint fine 
bread crumbs, 1 pint shelled and boiled French 
chestnuts chopped fine, salt, pepper, and 
chopped parsley to season, x h cup.melted butter. 

Oyster Stuffing for Poultry. — Substitute 
small raw oysters, picked and washed, for 
chestnuts in foregoing receipt. 

Celery Stuffing. — Substitute finely cut 
celery for chestnuts. 

Stuffing for Pork. — 3 large onions parboiled 
and chopped, 2 cups fine bread crumbs, 2 
tablespoons powdered sage, 2 tablespoons 
melted butter or pork fat, salt and pepper to 
taste. 

Stuffing for Geese and Ducks.— 2 chopped 
onions, 2 cups mashed potato, 1 cup bread 
crumbs, salt, pepper, and powdered sage to 
taste. 

Stuffing for Tomatoes, Green Peppers, 
etc. — 1 cup dry bread crumbs, Mi teaspoon 
salt, V4 teaspoon pepper, 1 teaspoon onion juice, 
1 tablespoon chopped parsley, 2 tablespoons 
melted butter. Hominy, rice, or other cooked 
cereal may take the place of crumbs. 



Poultry 



TO CLEAN POULTRY.— Put 2 table- 
spoons alcohol in saucer, ignite, and 
over this singe the fowl. Cut off head 
just below bill. Untie feet, break bone, and 
loosen sinews just below the joint ; pull out sin- 
ews and cut off feet. Cut out oil-sac. Lay 
breast down, slit skin down backbone toward 
head ; loosen windpipe and crop and pull 
them out. Cut off neck close to body. Make 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS 



small slit below end of breast-bone, put in 
the fingers, loosen intestines from backbone, 
take firm grasp of gizzard and draw all out. 
Cut round the vent so that the intestines are 
unbroken. Remove heart and lungs. Re- 
move kidneys. See that inside looks clean, 
then wipe out with wet cloth. Wipe off skin 
with cloth. 

To Truss Poultry.— Fill inside with stuf- 
fing (see Stuffings). Have at least 1 yard fine 
twine in trussing-needle. Turn wings across 
back so that pinions touch. Run needle 
through thick part of wing under bone, through 
body and wing on other side ; return in same 
way, but passing needle in over bone, tie firmly, 
leave several inches of twine. Press legs up 
against body, run needle through thigh, body, 
and second thigh, and return, going round 
bone in same way; tie firmly. Run needle 
through ends of legs, return, passing needle 
through rump ; if opening is badly torn, 1 or 2 
stitches may be needed, otherwise not. 

To Roast Poultry.— Rub all over with soft 
butter and sprinkle with salt and pepper. 
Place on rack in roasting-pan and put in very 
hot oven. Make basting-mixture with % cup 
each of butter or chicken-fat and water ; keep 
hot and baste every 10 or 15 minutes. Roast 3 
hours for 8- pound turkey, 1 to 1% hours for 
fowls. Keep oven very hot. If fowl is very 
large and heavy, cover breast and legs with 
several thicknesses paper to keep from burning. 

Poultry Gravy. — Pour off excess of fat in 
pan. Set pan on stove and sprinkle in suffi- 
cient flour to absorb fat. Stir until well 
browned. Gradually add hot water, or the 
chopped giblets with water in which they were 
cooked ; stir till smoothly thickened. Season, 
simmer for few minutes, and serve. 

Broiled Chicken. — Singe, split down back- 
bone, and clean. Grease broiler, arrange 
chicken on it, crossing legs and turning wings. 
Rub inside and out with soft butter, and sea- 
son. Have fire clear and hot. Cook flesh side 
first, holding up well that it may not brown too 
quickly. Should cook in about 20 or 25 min- 
utes, then turn and brown skin side. 

Fried Spring Chicken. — Clean and disjoint, 
then soak in salt water for 2 hours. Put in 
frying-pan equal parts of lard and butter — 
in all enough to cover chicken. Roll each 
piece in flour, dip in beaten egg, then roll in 
cracker crumbs, and drop into the boiling fat. 
Fry until browned on both sides. Serve on 
flat platter garnished with sprigs of parsley. 
Pour most of fat from frying-pan, thicken the 
remainder with browned flour, add to it cup of 
boiling water or milk. Serve in gravy-boat. 

Chicken Fricassee. — Clean and disjoint 
chicken. Wipe each piece. Put in pot, cover 
with boiling water and simmer till tender. To 
the liquor add 1 cup or more hot milk, and 
thicken with flour dissolved in cold water. 
Season well, boil up for a few minutes. Serve 
with dumplings or Royal biscuit. 

Brown Fricassee of Chicken.— Clean and 
disjoint. Brown in a few spoons hot butter 
or pork fat. Transfer to a kettle. To fat in 
pan add sufficient flour to absorb, stir and 
brown. Gradually add 1 pint hot water, stir 
till thickened, strain over chicken. Cover and 
simmer gently till tender. 

ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



37 



Chicken Pates. — Chop meat of cold chicken 
coarsely and season well. Make large cup rich 
drawn butter, and while on fire stir in 2 eggs, 
boiled hard, minced very fine, also a little 
chopped parsley, then chicken meat. Let al- 
most boil. Have ready some pat^-pans of 
good paste, baked quickly to light brown. Slip 
from pans while hot, fill with mixture and set 
in oven to heat. Arrange upon dish and serve 
hot. 

Boned Chicken. — Boil a chicken in little 
water as possible until meat will fall from 
bones ; remove all skin, chop together light 
and dark parts ; season with pepper and salt. 
Boil down liquid in which chicken was boiled, 
then pour it on meat ; place in tin, wrap tightly 
in cloth, press with heavyweight several hours. 
Serve cold, cut in thin slices. 

Chicken Pot=pie. — 2 large chickens dis- 
jointed and boiled in 2 quarts water ; add a few 
slices salt pork ; season. When nearly cooked, 
add crust made of 1 quart flour, 4 teaspoons 
Royal Baking Powder, 1 saltspoon salt; stir in 
stiff batter with water ; drop into kettle while 
boiling ; cover close and cook 25 minutes. 

Chicken Pot-pie, 2. — Disjoint 2 fowls and 
cook in 2 quarts water till very tender. Slip 
out bones and season. Line sides of clean ket- 
tle with rich biscuit crust (see Biscuits). Add 
chicken and thickened liquor. Stand on mod- 
erately hot fire. Build fire of dry cobs or small 
sticks round kettle, and keep burning till crust 
is well browned. Put chicken on platter and 
lay crust on it. Old-fashioned receipt. 

Make thick dumpling batter (see Dumplings). 
Drop by spoonfuls into thickened boiling liq- 
uor, cover closely for 20 minutes. New receipt. 

Chicken Pie.— Take 2 full-grown chickens, 
or more if small, disjoint them, cut backbone, 
etc., small as convenient. Boil them with few 
slices of salt pork in water enough to cover 
them, let boil quite tender, then take out breast- 
bone. After they boil and scum is taken off, 
put in a little onion cut very fine — not enough 
to taste distinctly, just enough to flavor a lit- 
tle ; rub some parsley very fine when dry, or 
cut fine when green — this gives pleasant fla- 
vor. Season well with pepper and salt, and 
few ounces good fresh butter. When all is 
cooked well, have liquid enough to cover 
chicken, then beat 2 eggs and stir in some 
sweet cream. Line 5-quart pan with crust 
made like Royal Baking Powder biscuit, only 
more shortening, put in chicken and liquid, 
cover with crust same as lining. Bake till 
crust is done, and you will have a good chicken 
pie. 

Creamed Chicken. — Make 1 cup cream 
sauce (see Sauces). Prepare 2 cups diced 
cooked chicken. Add to sauce, season well, 
simmer 10 minutes. 



Meat and Fish Sauces 

WHITE OR CREAM SAUCE.— Put 1 
tablespoon each of butter and flour in 
saucepan over fire. When mixed 
without browning add % teaspoon salt, V* tea- 
spoon white pepper, then, gradually, 1 cup hot 
milk. Stir until smoothly thickened, and sim- 
mer for 3 minutes. 



Thick White or Cream Sauce.— Make as 
above, but use double quantities of flour and 
butter. 

Bechamel Sauce.— 1 tablespoon each of 
flour and butter, Vi cup each thin cream and 
white stock — chicken or veal — salt and pep- 
per to taste. Prepare same manner as white 
sauce. 

Allemande Sauce. — Same as white sauce, 
with addition of 2 raw egg yolks added as 
taken from fire. 

Egg Sauce (for Fish).— 1 cup white sauce, 
2 chopped hard-boiled eggs, 1 tablespoon 
chopped parsley, 1 teaspoon lemon juice or 
vinegar. Add parsley after taking from fire. 

Caper Sauce. — 2 tablespoons butter, 1 ta- 
blespoon flour ; mix well ; pour on boiling 
water till it thickens ; add 1 hard-boiled egg 
chopped fine, and 2 tablespoons capers. 

Drawn Butter.— ^ cup butter, 2 tablespoons 
flour ; rub thoroughly together, then stir into 
pint boiling water ; little salt ; parsley if wished. 

Curry Sauce.— Slowly cook 1 tablespoon 
chopped onion in 1 tablespoon butter 5 minutes 
without coloring. Add 1 teaspoon curry pow- 
der, cook 2 minutes, add 1 cup white sauce, 
cook 2 minutes longer. 

Soubise Sauce. — Peel 3 large white onions ; 
boil very soft in salted water. Drain, rub 
through sieve, add 1 cup white sauce. 

Bread Sauce. — Cook in double boiler for 15 
minutes 1 pint milk, 2 tablespoons chopped 
onion ; add 1 tablespoon butter, Mj teaspoon 
salt, x 4 teaspoon pepper, and rub through sieve. 
Brown Ms cup coarse dry bread crumbs in 1 
tablespoon butter in frying-pan. Add these to 
sauce as it goes to table. 

Brown Sauce. — In saucepan brown 1 table- 
spoon butter until dark, but not burned. Add 
1 tablespoon flour, stir and brown again. Add 
gradually 1 cup good stock (beef is best) or hot 
water and stir until smooth and thick. Season 
with salt and pepper to taste. Simmer 5 minutes. 

Sauce Piquante. — To 1 cup brown sauce add 
1 tablespoon each of chopped capers and pickles 
and simmer 5 minutes. 

Mushroom Sauce. — Make 1 cup brown 
sauce, using equal quantities stock and liquor 
from canned mushrooms. Season, add 2 ta- 
blespoons chopped mushrooms, simmer 5 
minutes. 

Sharp Brown Sauce. — 1 tablespoon butter, 
1 tablespoon flour, 3 tablespoons vinegar, 1 
tablespoon tomato catsup, % cup stock. Make 
same way as brown sauce, add salt and pepper 
to taste. 

Sauce Robert. — 1 cup brown sauce made 
with stock, 1 teaspoon sugar, 1 teaspoon made 
mustard, 1 tablespoon vinegar. Simmer 5 
minutes. 

Olive Sauce. — 1 cup brown sauce, 24 stoned 
olives, 1 tablespoon sherry. Simmer olives in 
hot water 10 minutes. Drain, r.dd sauce, sim- 
mer 5 minutes ; take from fire and add sherry. 

Spanish Sauce. — Boil 1 quart strong stock 
down one half. Make as directed for brown 
sauce, and add 2 tablespoons sherry. 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



38 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



Currant Jelly Sauce. — Melt Ms glass cur- 
rant jelly over slow fire. Add 1 cup hot brown 
sauce ; stir well and simmer 1 minute. 

Tomato Sauce. — Simmer Ms can tomatoes, 
1 chopped onion, Ms teaspoon salt, Mi teaspoon 
pepper, 1 clove together 10 minutes. Rub 
through sieve. Cook together 1 tablespoon 
each of flour and butter 1 minute, add tomato 
gradually, stir till smooth, and. simmer 5 
minutes. 

Italian Tomato Sauce. — Simmer together 
for 20 minutes Ms can tomatoes, 6 cloves, 3 
sprigs parsley, 1 teaspoon mixed herbs, Ms tea- 
spoon whole allspice, Ms teaspoon peppercorns. 
Slowly brown 2 tablespoons chopped onion and 
1 tablespoon butter until very dark ; add 2 table- 
spoons flour, brown again; add gradually 1 
cup rich brown stock, then the cooked toma- 
toes. Simmer 10 minutes, rub through a sieve 
and add more seasoning if necessary. 

Hollandai.se Sauce.— Cream Ms cup butter ; 
add gradually 2 beaten egg yolks; stir well. 
Add 1 tablespoon lemon juice, dash each of 
salt and cayenne. Add Ms cup boiling water, 
and stir over boiling water till thick as boiled 
custard. Serve immediately. 

Sauce Tartare. — Make 1 cup mayonnaise 
(see Salads). Chop very fine 1 tablespoon each 
of capers, olives, green cucumber pickle, and 
parsley. Press in a cloth till quite dry. Blend 
gradually with the mayonnaise. For fried or 
broiled fish. 

Maitre d'Hotel Butter.— Cream 2 table- 
spoons butter, add gradually Ms teaspoon salt, 
Mi teaspoon white pepper, 1 tablespoon each of 
lemon juice and chopped parsley. Keep very 
cold. Serve with fried fish or broiled steak. 

Horse-radish Sauce.— Cream 2 tablespoons 
butter; add 2 tablespoons fresh grated horse- 
radish, 1 tablespoon very thick cream, Ms tea- 
spoon lemon juice. Keep very cold. 

Mint Sauce.— 1 cup chopped green mint 
leaves, Ms cup vinegar, V4 cup powdered sugar. 
Mix 1 hour before serving. 



Salads and Cheese 

MAYONNAISE.— Have dishes and in- 
gredients very cold. If summer, set 
dish in pan of pounded ice. In soup- 
plate or shallow bowl put yolk 1 raw egg, add 
V4 teaspoon salt and dash cayenne, a few drops 
of Tobasco and a teaspoon Worcestershire 
sauce, stir with fork till very thick. Add few 
drops olive oil and stir; add more oil, few 
drops at a time, until mixture balls on fork. 
Thin with few drops lemon juice or vinegar, 
then add more oil. Alternate in this way un- 
til 1 cup olive oil is used and dressing is thick 
and glossy, like a jelly. About 3 tablespoons 
lemon juice or 2 of vinegar will be needed, ac- 
cording to its acidity. Always stir in tlie same 
direction. Keep covered and on ice until 
needed. 

French Dressing. — Mix V4 teaspoon salt, 
dash white pepper, and 3 tablespoons olive oil. 
Stir for few minutes, then gradually add 1 ta- 
blespoon vinegar, stirring rapidly until mix- 
ture is slightly thickened and vinegar cannot 



be noticed. Mixture will separate after about 
20 minutes. 

Boiled Dressing. — 3 beaten eggs, 1 cup 
rich milk, % teaspoon dry mustard, 2 teaspoons 
salt, 2 dashes cayenne, 2 tablespoons olive oil 
or melted butter, Ms cup vinegar. Cook in 
double boiler till thick as custard. Strain and 
keep in cold place. 

Cream Dressing. — 1 cup cream, 1 tablespoon 
flour, 3 tablespoons vinegar, 2 tablespoons but- 
ter, Ms teaspoon powdered sugar, 1 teaspoon salt, 
V4 teaspoon pepper, Ms teaspoon dry mustard, 
whites 2 eggs. Cook in double boiler, stirring 
constantly, and adding whipped whites just be- 
fore taking from fire. 

Celery Salad. — 2 bunches celery, 1 tablespoon 
salad oil, 4 tablespoons vinegar, 1 small tea- 
spoon fine sugar, pepper and salt to taste. 
Wash and scrape celery ; lay in ice-cold water 
until dinner-time. Then cut into inch lengths, 
add above seasoning. Stir well together with 
fork and serve in salad-bowl. 

Chicken Salad. — Cut cold roast or boiled 
chicken in small dice, add ^ as much blanched 
celery cut fine, season with salt and pepper. 
Mix with French dressing and set away for 
an hour or more. Just before serving stir in 
some mayonnaise slightly thinned with lemon 
juice or French dressing, arrange on lettuce 
leaves and cover with thick mayonnaise. 

Lobster Salad. — Tear the meat of lobster 
into shreds with two forks, and let it get cold. 
Mix with blanched celery cut in small pieces — 
V 4 celery, % lobster. Mix with mayonnaise. 
Make cups of small blanched leaves of lettuce, 
fill with salad, garnish with mayonnaise, capers, 
and lobster coral. Keep on ice until served. 

Salmon Salad. — Remove bones and skin 
from can salmon. Drain off liquid. Mix 
with French dressing or thin mayonnaise ; set 
aside for a while. Finish same as lobster 
salad. Other fish salads may be prepared in 
same manner. 

Tomato Salad.— Pare with sharp knife. 
Slice and lay in salad-bowl. Make dressing as 
follows : Work up saltspoon each of salt, pep- 
per, and fresh made mustard with 2 table- 
spoons of salad oil, adding only a few drops at 
a time, and, when thoroughly mixed, whip in 
with an egg, beaten, 4 tablespoons vinegar; 
toss up with fork. 

Cucumber and Onion Salad.— Pare cucum- 
bers and lay in ice-water 1 hour ; do same with 
onions in another bowl. Then slice them in 
proportion of 1 onion to 3 large cucumbers; 
arrange in salad-bowl, and season with vine- 
gar, pepper, and salt. 

Potato Salad. — Make Ms amount of boiled 
dressing given; when cold, thin with vinegar 
or lemon juice, and add 2 tablespoons onion 
juice. Pour over diced boiled potatoes while 
hot. When cold serve with watercress or field 
salad, garnishing with diced pickled beets and 
sliced hard boiled egg. 

Potato and Egg Salad.— Hard boil 3 eggs 
30 minutes; shell and cut fine with silver 
knife. Boil 3 or 4 potatoes. Dice while hot, 
mix with cut eggs and add French dressing. 
Let stand till cold. Serve on bed of water- 
cress with more French dressing or boiled 
dressing thinned with vinegar. 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



39 



Cold Slaw. — Prepare Mj quantity boiled 
dressing. While hot pour over 1 quart shaved 
cabbage, cover closely; set away till cold. 
Red cabbage may also be used. 

Cheese Straws. — Roll out pie crust, 5, 
very thin. Sprinkle with grated sharp cheese 
and a dust of cayenne, fold in three, roll out, 
and dust a second time with cheese. Fold, 
roll out quite thin, cut in fine strips or straws 
with jagging-iron, lay on flat pans and bake in 
very moderate oven. 

Welsh Rarebit. — Select richest and best 
American cheese, the milder the better, as 
melting brings out strength. To make 5 rare- 
bits, take 1 pound cheese, grate and put in tin 
or porcelain-lined saucepan ; add ale (old is 
best) enough to thin the cheese sufficiently, 
say about a wine-glass to each rarebit. Place 
over fire, stir until it is melted. Have slice of 
toast ready for each rarebit (crusts trimmed) ; 
put a slice on each plate, and pour cheese enough 
over each piece to cover it. Serve while hot. 



Eggs 



mix them lightly with yolks ; pour the mixture 
into a greased pan or dish ; bake in quick oven. 
When well risen and lightly browned on the 
top it is done ; roll out in dish, sift pulverized 
sugar over and send to table. You can also 
pour some rum over it and set it on fire, as for 
an omelet au rhum. 

Plain and Fancy Baked Eggs.— Butter 
small stoneware dishes. Carefully break egg 
in each. Add salt, pepper, and bit of butter. 
Bake in oven till white is set. 

May be varied by buttering dish and adding 
chopped parsley or ham, soaked bread crumbs, 
chopped onions, or a little stewed tomato. 



Vegetables 



H 



SOFT AND HARD BOILED EGGS.— For 
soft boiled drop into boiling water and 
boil 3 to 3Mi minutes. A better way is 
to have water boiling in a saucepan. Take 
from fire, add eggs quickly, cover, and let 
stand off fire away from drafts from 8 to 10 
minutes, according to freshness of eggs. 

Hard boiled eggs should be simmered at 
least 20 minutes. This gives mealy yolks, 
which digest more readily than sodden ones. 

Poached Eggs.— Toast small slice of bread 
for each egg; trim and lay on hot platter. 
Have frying-pan partly filled with salted water. 
When simmering, carefully break in 1 egg at 
a time. Baste with the water until white is 
firm, take up with skimmer, trim edge of 
white and slip on toast. 

Scrambled Eggs. — Beat together 4 eggs, 
Mi cup cream or rich milk, % teaspoon salt, V* 
teaspoon pepper. Turn into hot buttered pan, 
stir till set. Serve on toast. 

Chopped boiled ham or other cold meat may 
be mixed with the eggs before cooking. 

Omelet. — Break 3 eggs in bowl ; add 1 tea- 
spoon cold water. Beat with fork till mixed. 
Add Vfe teaspoon salt. Turn into very hot but- 
tered pan, shake and stir till eggs begin to set. 
Let form, fold and turn out on hot platter. 

Fancy Omelets. — Finely chopped cooked 
meats, vegetables cut fine, chopped parsley, 
etc., may be added to plain omelet and dish 
named according to what is added, as ham 
omelet, omelet with peas, etc. 

Orange or other Sweet Omelet.— Sepa- 
rate and whip whites and yolks of 3 eggs. 
Pour yolks over whites, add grated rind of 
orange and 1 tablespoon of orange juice, 1 table- 
spoon powdered sugar. Mix and cook as above. 

Omelet Souffle.— Break 6 eggs into sep- 
arate cups ; beat 4 of the yolks, mix with them 
teaspoon flour, 3 tablespoons powdered sugar, 
very little salt ; flavor with extract lemon or 
any other flavors that may be preferred. 
Whisk the whites of the 6 eggs to firm froth ; 

THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER 



1NTS ON COOKING VEGETABLES.— 

First — Have them fresh as possible. 
Summer vegetables should be cooked 
on same day they are gathered. Second — 
Look them over and wash well, cutting out 
all decayed or unripe parts. Third — Lay 
them, when peeled, in cold water for some 
time before using. Fourth — Always let 
water boil before putting them in, and con- 
tinue to boil until done. 

Turnips. — Should be peeled, and boiled from 
40 minutes to an hour. 

Beets. — Boil from 1 to 2 hours ; then put in 
cold water and slip skin off. 

Spinach. — Boil 20 minutes. 

Parsnips. — Boil from 20 to 30 minutes. 

Onions. — Best boiled in 2 or 3 waters, add- 
ing milk the last time. 

String Beans. — Should be boiled IV2 hours. 

Shell Beans. — Require an hour. 

Green Corn. — Boil 20 or 30 minutes. 

Green Peas. — Should be boiled in little 
water as possible ; boil 20 minutes. 

Asparagus. — Same as peas; serve on toast 
with cream gravy. 

Winter Squash. — Cut in pieces and boil 20 
to 40 minutes in small quantity of water ; when 
done, press water out, mash smooth, season 
with butter, pepper, and salt. 

Cabbage. — Should be boiled from 1 to 2 
hours in plenty of water ; salt while boiling. 

Asparagus on Toast.— Have stalks of equal 
length ; scrape lower ends ; tie in small bunches 
with tape. Cook 20 to 30 minutes, according 
to size. Dip 6 or 8 slices dry toast in asparagus 
liquor, lay on hot platter, place asparagus on 
them, and cover with a white or drawn butter 
sauce ; in making sauce use asparagus liquor 
and water or milk in equal quantities. 

String Beans. — Top and tail the beans, and 
strip off all strings carefully ; break into short 
lengths and wash. Boil in salted water until 
tender — from \Mi to 3 hours. Drain, season 
with butter, salt, and pepper. 

Kidney Beans, Brown Sauce. — Cook 1 pint 
fresh shelled beans in salted water till tender. 
Drain ; shake in saucepan with 1 teaspoon but- 
ter 3 minutes. Add 1 cup brown sauce (see 
Sauces), and simmer 5 minutes. 

Beets, Cream Sauce.— Wash and boil beets 
till tender. Rub off skins and slice or dice. 
To 1 pint add 1 cup white sauce (see Sauces) ; 
simmer 5 minutes. Other root vegetables may 
be finished same way. 



IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



40 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



Boiled Cabbage.— Strip off outer leaves, cut 
in quarters, cut out stalk. Soak in salted wa- 
ter 1 hour. Drain. Have kettle of rapidly 
boiling water. Add Mi teaspoon baking soda 
and cabbage. Cover and keep at galloping bod. 
Unless very old, cabbage will be done in 1 hour. 
Press out all water ; season well ; put in hot dish. 

Carrots and other Root Vegetables.— 
Scrape or pare carrots, parsnips, turnips. Dice 
and cook gently in unsalted water till tender. 
Drain and reheat in seasoned butter, 1 table- 
spoon to 1 pint, or in a drawn butter or white 
sauce. In early summer, when roots are small, 
water should be salted. Onions should also be 
boiled in salted water, then finished as here 
directed. 

Stewed Corn.— Husk corn. Draw sharp 
knife down center of each row of grains ; press 
out pulp with back of knife. To 1 pint add Mi 
teaspoon salt, Mi teaspoon sugar, dash pepper, 
Mi cup cream or rich milk. Heat and simmer 
10 minutes. 

Corn Pudding. — To 1 pint scraped corn pulp 
add 4 beaten eggs, 1 pint milk, 1 teaspoon salt, 
Mi teaspoon pepper. Mix, bake in moderate 
oven till set in center. 

Fried Egg Plant.— Wipe the egg plant, cut 
in V4-inch slices, soak in salted cold water 1 
hour. Dip each slice in beaten egg and fry in 
butter until inside is very soft, outside brown. 

Fried Onions.— Peel (holding onions and 
hands under water to prevent tears), wash and 
cut crosswise so as to form undivided rings. 
Flour them, fry 5 or 6 minutes. Drain, 
sprinkle with salt and pepper, and serve with 
beefsteak. 

Fried Potatoes. — Pare raw potatoes; cut 
thin as wafers with sharp knife or patent 
slicer. Soak 20 minutes in cold water ; dry on 
towel. Throw a handful at a time in kettle of 
smoking-hot fat ; skim out fast as browned and 
drain on unglazed paper. Sprinkle with salt. 

Fried Potatoes, 2.— Cut cold boiled potatoes 
in thick slices, season and saute' in a little hot 
fat in a frying-pan. 

Mashed Potatoes.— Boil potatoes in salted 
water; while hot put through ricer or mash 
with fork till smooth. Season with salt and 
pepper ; to 1 pint add 1 tablespoon butter and 
2 tablespoons hot milk. Beat till light, heap 
in hot dish. 

Baked Potatoes. — Scrub potatoes of same 
size. Bake in very hot oven until tender. Press 
till skin breaks slightly, serve hot with butter. 

Potato Croquettes. — Mix together 1 pint 
hot mashed potato, 1 teaspoon salt, Mi teaspoon 
pepper, 1 teaspoon onion juice, 1 tablespoon 
butter, 1 tablespoon chopped parsley, yolks 2 
beaten eggs. Stir over fire till mixture leaves 
sides of saucepan. When cool, shape into cro- 
quettes, dip each in beaten egg, roll in crumbs, 
and fry brown in deep kettle of smoking-hot fat. 

Lyonnaise Potatoes.— Heat 1 tablespoon 
butter in frying-pan. Add 1 tablespoon 
chopped onion. When pale brown add 1 pint 
diced boiled potatoes, seasoned. Shake till 
butter is absorbed ; potatoes should not color. 
Add 1 tablespoon chopped parsley and take up. 

Creamed Potatoes.— To 3 cups diced 
boiled potatoes add 1 pint cream sauce (see 
Sauces), more seasoning if necessary, and 



simmer 10 minutes. Or, season cold sliced 
potatoes, cover with milk, and stew till milk is 
reduced one half, then add a little butter. 

Stewed Squash.— Pare small squash, re- 
move seeds, boil in salted water till tender. 
Drain, mash, season, and stir over slow fire till 
quite dry. Add butter and seasoning to taste. 

Stewed Tomatoes.— Scald and skin toma- 
toes, remove hard ends and cut up. Stew in 
agate saucepan till tender, add salt, pepper, 
and sugar to taste, also 1 teaspoon butter to 
each pint. If liked, thicken with fine crumbs 
or with a little flour dissolved in cold water. 

Stuffed Tomatoes.— Choose large toma- 
toes ; cut off stem ends and take out centers. 
Fill with stuffing (see Stuffings), lay on but- 
tered baking-pan, and bake in hot oven 30 
minutes. Peppers, summer squash, large ripe 
cucumbers, onions, and egg plant may be pre- 
pared in same way. 

Panned Tomatoes. — Cut firm tomatoes in 
halves. For 4, heat 1 tablespoon butter in 
frying-pan. Dip tomatoes in flour, put cut 
side down in pan, cover, and cook over hot fire 
until browned. Transfer to hot dish, sprinkle 
1 tablespoon flour in pan, stir, add 1 cup milk ; 
stir till thickened, season, boil 1 minute, and 
pour round tomatoes. 

Mashed Turnips.— Pare and dice turnips, 
boil in unsalted water till tender. Mash, adding 
salt, pepper, and butter to taste. If cut small 
they will cook in less time and be less odorous. 

Ragout of Vegetables.— Parboil 1 carrot, 
1 turnip, 2 potatoes, 2 ears of corn, 1 cup of 
lima beans, and the same of peas, 1 onion, and 
with them V4 pound of fat salt pork. Drain 
off the water and lay aside the pork. Slice 
carrots, turnips, potatoes, and onion. Put 
into a saucepan with a cup of some good meat 
soup before it has been thickened. Season 
well ; cut the corn from the cob and add with 
the peas, beans, and a sliced tomato as soon as 
the rest are hot. Stew all together Mi hour. 
Stir in a great lump of butter rolled in flour. 
Stew 5 minutes, and serve in a deep dish. 

Dried Sweet Corn. — Soak 1 pint overnight. 
Drain, add fresh cold water, and cook slowly. 
When tender drain, add Mi cup rich milk, 1 
tablespoon butter, salt and pepper to taste, 
simmer 10 minutes. 

Boiled Rice. — Wash 1 cup rice through sev- 
eral waters till water runs off clear. Have at 
least 4 quarts rapidly boiling water in kettle. 
Add rice and 1 tablespoon salt. Boil at a gallop 
until rice is tender — this takes 12 to 20 min- 
utes according to kind and age of rice. Drain, 
set colander over boding water for 10 minutes 
or more to steam. Each grain will be distinct 
yet tender. 

Macaroni. — Have a large kettle nearly full 
of rapidly boiling salted water. Break maca- 
roni into 2 or 3 inch lengths, drop into the 
water, and boil as directed for rice until tender, 
which will take from 30 to 45 minutes. Drain, 
then pour cold water through the colander to 
remove pastiness. Reheat in a little butter, 
or in a white, brown, or tomato sauce. Before 
sending to table, sprinkle thickly with grated 
cheese or stir the cheese through it. 

Spaghetti, vermicelli, or any of the forms of 
paste may be prepared in the same way. 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



41 



Pickles, Etc. 



USE glass bottles for pickles, also wooden 
knives and forks in preparation of 
them. Fill bottles 3 parts full with 
articles to be pickled, then fill bottle with 
vinegar. Use saucepans lined with earthen- 
ware, or stone pipkins, to boil vinegar in. 

Chow Chow. — 1 quart large cucumbers, 1 
quart small cucumbers, 2 quarts onions, 4 heads 
cauliflower, 6 green peppers, 1 quart green 
tomatoes, 1 gallon vinegar, 1 pound mustard, 
2 cups sugar, 2 cups flour, 1 ounce turmeric. 
Put all in salt and water one night ; cook all the 
vegetables in brine until tender, except large 
cucumbers. Pour over vinegar and spices. 

Pickling Cauliflowers. — Take whitest and 
closest cauliflowers in bunches ; spread on 
earthen dish, cover them with salt, and let 
stand 3 days to draw out all the water. Then 
put in jars, pour boiling salt and water over 
them, let stand overnight ; then drain with a 
hair-sieve, and put in glass jars ; fill up jars 
with vinegar ; cover tight. 

Piccalilly. — 1 peck green tomatoes, sliced; 
% peck onions, sliced ; 1 cauliflower, 1 peck 
small cucumbers. Leave in salt and water 24 
hours ; then put in kettle with handful scraped 
horse-radish, 1 ounce turmeric, 1 ounce cloves 
(whole), x 4 pcund pepper (whole), 1 ounce 
cassia-buds or cinnamon, 1 pound white mus- 
tard seed, 1 pound English mustard. Place in 
kettle in layers, and cover with cold vinegar. 
Boil 15 minutes, constantly stirring. 

Pickled Red Cabbage. — Slice it into a col- 
ander, sprinkle each layer with salt; let it 
drain 2 days, then put into a jar, pour boiling 
vinegar enough to cover, put in a few slices of 
red beetroot. Choose purple red cabbage. 
Those who like flavor of spice will boil it with 
the vinegar. Cauliflower cut in bunches, and 
thrown in after being salted, will look red and 
beautiful. 

Tomato Catsup. — 1 gallon tomatoes 
(strained), 6 tablespoons salt, 3 tablespoons 
black pepper, 1 tablespoon cloves, 2 tablespoons 
cinnamon, 2 tablespoons allspice, lMi pints 
vinegar ; boil down one half. 1 peck tomatoes 
will make 1 gallon strained. 

Walnut Catsup.— Take green walnuts be- 
fore the shell is formed (usually in a proper 
state early in August). Grind them or pound 
them in an earthen or marble mortar. Squeeze 
out the juice through a coarse cloth, and add to 
every gallon of juice 1 pound of anchovies, 1 
pound salt, 4 ounces cayenne pepper, 2 ounces 
black pepper, 1 ounce each ginger, cloves, and 
mace, and the root of one horse-radish. Boil all 
together till reduced to half the quantity. 
Pour off, and when cold bottle tight. Use in 3 
months. 



Beverages 



BOILED COFFEE. -For 4 heaping table- 
spoons ground coffee allow 1 quart 
freshly boiling water and Mi white 1 raw 
egg. Mix the egg white with 3 tablespoons 
cold water, beating with fork. Add coffee and 



stir till well wet. Scald coffee-pot, put in pre- 
pared coffee. Pour in boiling water, cover 
spout, and boil 5 minutes. Pour in quickly 
V4 cup cold water, let stand 3 minutes to set- 
tle. Strain into hot pot or have strainer on 
table. 

Coffee for Six Persons.— Take 1 full cup 
ground coffee, 1 egg, a little cold water ; stir 
together, add 1 pint boiling water, boil up ; 
then add another pint boiling water, and set 
back to settle before serving. 

French Coffee. — 1 quart water to 1 cup very 
fine ground coffee. Put coffee grounds in 
bowl ; pour over about Mi pint cold water and 
let stand for 15 minutes ; bring remaining 
water to a boil. Take coffee in bowl, strain 
through fine sieve, then take French coffee- 
pot, put coffee grounds in strainer at top 
of French pot, leaving water in bowl. Then 
take boiling water and pour over coffee very 
slowly. Then set coffee-pot on stove 5 min- 
utes ; must not boil. Take off and pour in 
cold water from bowl that coffee was first 
soaked in, to settle. Serve in another pot. 
The French, who have the reputation of mak- 
ing the best coffee, use 3 parts Java, 1 part 
Mocha. 

Vienna Coffee. — Equal parts Mocha and 
Java coffee ; allow 1 heaping tablespoon of 
coffee to each person, and 2 extra to make good 
strength. Mix 1 egg with grounds, pour on 
coffee Mi as much boiling water as will be 
needed, let coffee froth, then stir down grounds 
and let boil 5 minutes ; then let coffee stand 
where it will keep hot, but not boil, for 5 or 
10 minutes, and add rest of water. To 1 pint 
cream add white of an egg, well beaten ; this 
is to be put in cups with sugar, and hot coffee 
added. 

Tea. — Water for tea should be freshly 
heated and just boiling. Teas are of differing 
strengths, but a safe rule is 1 teaspoon dry tea 
to Mi pint boiling water. Scald tea-pot ; put in 
dry tea and cover for 1 minute. Add boiling 
water, cover closely. Let stand 3 to 6 min- 
utes, strain off into second hot pot. A wadded 
cozy will keep tea hot for a long time off the 
fire. 

Cocoa. — The usual rule is 1 teaspoon cocoa 
to each cup. Mix dry cocoa with little cold 
water, add scalded milk or boiling water, and 
boil 1 minute. 

Chocolate. — 1 square unsweetened choco- 
late, 1 tablespoon sugar, 2 tablespoons hot wa- 
ter. Grate chocolate, boil all together till 
smooth, add gradually 1 pint scalded milk, 
cook in double boiler 5 minutes. Some like 
to add 1 teaspoon vanilla. It can be made 
stronger by using more chocolate. 



Cookery for the Sick 

ALWAYS prepare food for the sick in the 
neatest and most careful manner. In 
L sickness the senses are unusually acute, 
and far more susceptible to carelessness, neg- 
ligence, and mistakes in the preparation and 
serving of food than when in health. 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE 



42 



THE ROYAL BAKER AND PASTRY COOK 



Corn Meal Gruel. — Mix 1 tablespoon corn 
meal, % teaspoon salt, and 2 tablespoons cold 
water. Add 1 pint boiling water, simmer 
slowly 1 hour. In serving bowl put 2 table- 
spoons cream, 1 lump sugar, strain in gruel, 
stir for a moment, and serve. 

Flour and arrowroot gruel is made in the 
same way, but cooked only 10 minutes. 

Farina gruel is made with milk and cooked 1 
hour in double boiler. 

Boil oatmeal gruel 1 hour and strain. 

Barley Water. — Wash 2 tablespoons pearl 
barley, scald with boiling water, boil 5 minutes, 
strain. Add 2 quarts cold water, simmer till 
reduced Mj. Strain, add lemon juice to taste. 
Good in fevers. 

Wine Whey. — Scald 1 cup milk, add 1 cup 
wine, cook gently till it wheys. Strain through 
cheese-cloth. 

Beef Tea. — Chop very fine 1 pound lean 
beef round. Cover with Vi pint cold water. 
Stand in cold place 1 hour. Set over hot 
water, stir till liquid begins to turn color. 
Strain, add pinch salt. To reheat, set cup in 
pan of hot water. 

Restorative Jelly. — Put in glass jar Mj box 
granulated gelatine, 1 tablespoon granulated 
gum arabic, 2 cloves, 3 tablespoons sugar, 2 
tablespoons lemon juice, 1 cup port wine. 
Stand in kettle cold water, heat till all is dis- 
solved. Strain into shallow dish. Chill. Cut in 
Mj-inch squares. 



Candies 

GRANULATED sugar is preferable. 
Candy should not be stirred while boil- 
ing. Cream tartar should not be added 
until syrup begins to boil. Butter should be 
put in when candy is almost done. Flavors 
are more delicate when not boiled in candy 
but added afterward. 

Butter Scotch. — 2 cups sugar, 2 tablespoons 
water, piece butter size of an egg. Boil with- 
out stirring until it hardens on a spoon. Pour 
out on buttered plates to cool. 

Cream Candy. — 1 pound white sugar, 3 
tablespoons vinegar, 1 teaspoon extract lemon, 
1 teaspoon cream tartar. Add little water to 
moisten sugar, boil until brittle. Put in ex- 
tract, then turn quickly out on buttered plates. 
When cool, pull until white, and cut in squares. 

Cream Walnuts. — 2 cups sugar, % cup 
water. Boil without stirring until it will 
spin a thread ; flavor with extract vanilla. 
Set off into dish with cold water in; when at 
blood heat stir briskly until white and creamy, 
then knead and work with the hands for sev- 
eral minutes. Have walnuts shelled ; make 
cream into small round cakes with your fingers ; 
press half a walnut on either side, and drop 
into sifted granulated sugar. For cream dates, 
take fresh dates, remove stones, and fill center 
of dates with this same cream. Drop into 
sugar. 

Creamed Nuts. — Mix 1 pound confectioners' 
sugar, white 1 unbeaten egg, 1 teaspoon va- 
nilla, and 2 teaspoons cold water to a stiff 
paste. Shape in little balls, press between 



halved walnut or other nut meats. Stoned 
dates and large raisins may be filled with this 
cream, or it may be mixed with chopped nuts, 
shaped in bars, and cut in squares. 

Butter Taffy. — Boil 3 cups brown sugar, % 
cup molasses, V* cup each hot water and vin- 
egar. When it crisps in cold water, add 2 
tablespoons butter, 1 teaspoon vanilla, cook 3 
minutes, cool on buttered pans. 

Candied Popcorn.— Put into an iron kettle 
1 tablespoon butter, 3 tablespoons water, 1 
tea-cup white pulverized sugar. Boil until 
ready to candy, then throw in 3 quarts nicely 
popped corn. Stir briskly till candy is evenly 
distributed over corn. Take kettle from fire, 
stirnmtil it is cooled a little and you have each 
grain separate and crystallized with sugar, 
taking care that corn does not burn. Nuts of 
any kind may be prepared in same way. 

Cocoanut Cream Candy. — 1 cocoanut, l\b 
pounds granulated sugar. Put sugar and milk 
of cocoanut together, heat slowly until sugar 
is melted ; then boil 5 minutes ; add cocoanut 
(finely grated), boil 10 minutes longer, stir 
constantly to keep from burning. Pour on 
buttered plates, cut in squares. Will take 
about 2 days to harden. Use prepared cocoa- 
nut when other cannot be had. 

Hickory Nut Candy. — 1 cup hickory nuts 
(meats), 2 cups sugar, ^ cup water. Boil 
sugar and water, without stirring, until thick 
enough to spin a thread ; flavor with extract 
lemon or vanilla. Set off into cold water; 
stir quickly until white ; then stir in nuts ; 
turn into flat tin; when cold cut into small 
squares. 

Chocolate Caramels.— 2 cups molasses, 1 
cup brown sugar, 1 cup cream or milk, Mt 
pound chocolate, piece of butter size of an 
egg. Beat all together ; boil until it thickens in 
water ; turn into large flat tins, well buttered. 
When nearly cold, cut into small squares. 

Ice Cream Candy.— 3 cups sugar, crushed 
or cut loaf, a little less than Vfc cup vinegar, 1 Vfc 
cups cold water, piece of butter size of a wal- 
nut, flavor with extract vanilla. Boil until it 
hardens, then pull until white. 

Molasses Candy. — 3 cups yellow coffee 
sugar, 1 cup molasses, 1 cup water, V2 tea- 
spoon cream tartar, butter size of a walnut. 
Follow directions for cream candy. 

Velvet Molasses Candy.— Put 1% pounds 
sugar, Vi pint molasses, Vi pint water, V4 cup 
vinegar, in agate kettle. Heat; when boiling 
add Mj teaspoon cream tartar, boil till it crisps 
in cold water. Stir ; when almost done add V\ 
pound butter, V4 teaspoon soda. Cool in but- 
tered pan and pull. 

Peanut Brittle. — Shell and chop roasted 
nuts to measure 1 pint. Put 2 pounds granu- 
lated sugar in clean frying-pan. Stir over slow 
fire. It will lump, then gradually melt. When 
pale coffee color and clear add nuts and pour 
quickly on buttered tin sheet. Roll thin as 
possible. When cold break up. 

Fudge. — Cook 3 cups sugar, 1 cup milk, and 
1 tablespoon butter. When sugar is melted 
add 4 or 5 tablespoons cocoa. Stir and boil 15 
minutes. Take from fire, add 1 teaspoon va- 
nilla, stir till creamy, pour on buttered plates, 
i cut in squares. 



THE ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. 



ROYAL 

A STRICTLY PURE, CREAM OF TARTAR BAKING POWDER 

THE tests made by the Government chemists show that Royal 
Baking Powder is of the highest efficiency and usefulness as a 
leavening agent ; that it does not contain alum, ammonia, or lime, and 
is absolutely pure. The official tests by the various State Food Com- 
missions, Boards of Health, and official analysts show no other baking 
powder so pure, strong, and healthful. 

More ill health and physical discomfort result from unwholesome 
food than from any other one cause, and chief among unwholesome 
foods are the alum and other cheaply made baking powders. 

The market is full of low-grade powders, mostly made from burnt 
alum and phosphatic acid. The sale of these powders is urged by some 
dealers because they are bought cheap at wholesale and yield them 
large profits. Consumers should ash for Royal and take no substitute. 

Alum baking powders are classed as poisonous by the most eminent 
physicians. They cost but three cents a pound to make, and being sold 
at from twenty to forty cents, are also a commercial fraud. They cause 
indigestion, heartburn, dyspepsia, and diseases of the liver and kidneys. 
Consumers who value their health must be on their guard against 
these dangerous powders. It will be safer in all cases to demand the 
Royal and take no other. 

The housewife will find no possible substitute for the Royal Baking 
Powder. There is no other baking powder or preparation that will 
render the food so excellent in every quality. 

Instead of cream of tartar and soda, or soda and sour milk, the 
best housekeepers now use Royal Baking Powder. It is almost impos- 
sible for the housekeeper to procure pure cream of tartar. Professor 
Chandler, when president of the New York Board of Health, stated in 
an official report that he found upon investigation that nearly all the 
cream of tartar sold by grocers was adulterated with white clay, alum, 
or other hurtful substance. These ingredients are dangerous to health, 
impoverishing the blood, producing dyspepsia, etc. Professor Chandler 
strongly recommends the use of a well-known baking powder (like the 
Royal) in aU kinds of baking as more convenient, economical, and 
healthful. 

Royal Baking Powder is sold only in securely labeled tin cans. 

Remember, in all old receipts where cream of tartar and soda or 
saleratus are called for, you can substitute Royal Baking Powder and 
get better results. 

The usual proportions, old way, are : 2 teaspoonfuls cream of tartar 
to 1 of soda or saleratus ; 

Instead of which use 2 teaspoonfuls op Royal Baking Powder, 
and mix it with the flour while dry. This powder is so pure and per- 
fectly combined that one third less will do better work. 

Never use so-called prepared or self-raising flours. They 
mostly contain alum, phosphates, or other injurious ingredients. 



THE OFFICIAL TESTS 

SHOW ROYAL BAKING POWDER SUPERIOR TO ALL OTHERS 

The United States Government, after elaborate tests, reports the Royal Baking Powder 
a pure cream of tartar powder of greater leavening strength than any other. 

Bulletin 13, U. S. Ag. Dep., p. 599. 

The Canadian official tests, recently made, show the Royal B aking Powder highest of all 
in leavening strength. Bulletin 10, Inland Rev. Dep., p. 16. 

The Royal Baking Powder is superior to any other powder which I have examined; a 
baking powder unequaled for purity, strength, and wholesomeness. 

Willis G. Tucker, M.D., Ph.D., New York State Analyst 

As the excellence of a baking powder is dependent upon the yield of leavening gas, and 
upon the wholesomeness and purity of its ingredients, the Royal is unquestionably the best. 

Massachusetts State Analyst 

The best baking powder made is, as shown by analysis, the Royal. 

Cyrus Edson, BLD., Com'r of Health, New York City. 

I find the Royal Baking Powder superior to all the others in every respect. It is purest 
and strongest. Walter S. Haines, M.D., Consulting Chemist, 

Chicago Board of Health. 

Our test shows that Royal Baking Powder has greater leavening power than any other 
of which we have knowledge. W. B. Rising, State Analyst, California. 

I have from time to time analyzed the Royal Baking Powder, and have uniformly found it 
to be high in leavening power and to be composed of pure ingredients. 

H. A. Weber, State Analyst, Ohio. 

My tests show the Royal Baking Powder of very superior leavening power; a cream of 
tartar powder of the highest purity, containing no alum, lime, ammonia, or any unwhole- 
some material. R. C. Kedzie, late State Analyst, Michigan. 

Royal Baking Powder is composed of the best and purest ingredients. It is absolutely 
pure, with perfect keeping qualities, and as strong as such a powder can be made. Royal 
makes the food much finer, besides assuring its perfect healthfulness. 

G. N. Failure, Kansas State Chemist. 

I have submitted the Royal Baking Powder to careful chemical tests, and find it to be 
perfectly free from any substance in any way deleterious or injurious. 

H. A. Huston, Indiana State Chemist. 

Royal Baking Powder is free from alum and every adulteration, and it has a larger amount 
of leavening gas than any of the others analyzed. M A. Scovell, 

Director Kentucky AgL Exp. Station. 

I have made a large number of analyses of Royal Baking Powder, and have found it to be 
an absolutely pure cream of tartar powder, entirely free from alum, ammonia, and all adultera- 
tions and impurities. In leavening power it is of the very highest. 

Charles W. Drew, late State Chemist, Minnesota. 

In this market I find but one powder besides Royal made from cream of tartar. Royal is 
the strongest, purest, most economical. H. H. Nicholson, Nebraska State Chemist. 

I find the Royal to be absolutely pure and highest in leavening power. 

Albert Menke, Arkansas State Chemist. 

From actual analysis made by me, I pronounce the Royal Baking Powder to be the 
strongest and purest Baking Powder before the public. W. T. Wenzell, 

Analyst San Francisco Board of Health. 

The Royal Baking Powder is superior in regard to purity, leavening power, and keeping 
qualities. Geo. S. Cox, State Chemist, Wisconsin. 

I allow no baking powder other than the Royal to be used in my kitchen, for I know it to 
be absolutely pure and all that is claimed for it. 

Wm. T. Cutter, Connecticut State Chemist 

The Royal was found the highest in leavening strength, and the best powder analyzed. 

George F. Payne, State Chemist, Georgia. 

There is no baking powder known to us equal to the Royal We confidently recommend 
it for purity and wholesomeness. W. Q. Webb, H.D., , 

President Board of Health, Spokane, Washington. 

Royal Baking Powder has been found by every examination— official or competitive— 
to be the highest of ALL in leavening power, and of absolute purity and wholesomeness. 



OCT IS 1QQ2 



LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 





011 791 875 



